Neck stiffness and head tilted to one side after cerebral hemorrhage is usually caused by the occurrence of triple deviation sign after the onset of cerebral hemorrhage, which needs to be relieved by medication or surgery. Most of the cerebral hemorrhage belongs to hypertensive cerebral hemorrhage, which is caused by long-term high blood pressure without good control, resulting in vascular sclerosis, leading to the weakening of blood vessel elasticity, which in turn causes blood vessel rupture and bleeding. The bleeding site of cerebral hemorrhage is mostly seen in the basal ganglia area, and after the onset of the disease, patients are prone to three partial signs, which refers to hemiparesis, hemiplegia, hemiplegia, hemianopsia, and hemianopia, and is also called the three partial syndromes. At this time, the patient may show that the eyes are staring to one side, accompanied by obvious neck resistance, and the head is tilted to the side of the hemorrhagic lesion, i.e., the neck is stiff and the head is tilted to one side after the cerebral hemorrhage. For patients with this symptom, it is important not to force the patient’s head and neck back by violent means, as too violent action may cause cervical spine injury. Patients suspected of having a cerebral hemorrhage need to consult a doctor in time, standardize the diagnosis and treatment, and actively start rehabilitation training after the condition is stabilized, which will help improve the patient’s symptoms and restore normal function.