Patients with cirrhotic gastrointestinal bleeding can die as a direct result if they are not treated promptly and bleed heavily. If the bleeding improves with treatment and the cirrhosis stabilizes, survival can also reach more than 10 years. Cirrhosis with gastrointestinal bleeding is already advanced cirrhosis, and the survival period is slightly shorter than that of compensated cirrhosis. The survival of patients depends mainly on the cause of cirrhosis, the severity of cirrhosis, and whether it is combined with other complications and the severity of bleeding. The hemorrhage itself can be mostly stopped by internal medicine and endoscopic hemostasis. How long the late survival depends on a variety of reasons, and patients can die from other complications of cirrhosis, such as hepatic encephalopathy, hepatocellular carcinoma, sepsis and other infections. However, if elderly patients have underlying diseases such as heart, lung and kidney, the bleeding is large and the presence of uncontrollable haematemesis can lead directly to death. If the bleeding stops and cirrhosis progresses slowly, such as those caused by alcohol or drugs, the survival period can be more than 10 years after removing the cause.