Rheumatoid arthritis is a common systemic disease with chronic, aggressive, symmetric arthritis as its main clinical manifestation. The disease is associated with autoimmune disorders and has a high morbidity and disability rate, with 15% of patients completely losing their workforce within a few years after the onset of the disease. Early diagnosis of the disease is very important, and once joint pain occurs, especially with swollen joints and morning stiffness, prompt consultation should be made with the Rheumatology and Immunology Department. After systematic and standardized treatment of rheumatoid arthritis, most patients can be in complete remission, so that the patient feels no pain, the joint swelling disappears, and the blood tests return to normal. There is no cure for this disease, and some advertisements claiming a cure are not based on science. How should the regular treatment be carried out? Firstly, the patient should be educated and helped to build up the confidence to overcome the disease. Second, try to treat the disease as early as possible, so that it can be well controlled and does not progress to joint deformity. Third, individualized treatment should be carried out, because different people react differently to drugs, and there are differences in treatment effects as well as in the occurrence of adverse reactions. There is also the principle that the patient should cooperate with the doctor in monitoring the adverse reactions to the drug. In addition, early functional exercises should be performed after treatment, so that the joints can remain very functional. The world-accepted treatment for rheumatoid arthritis is combination therapy, which means that both the drugs that treat the symptoms and the drugs that treat the root cause should be used well together. Treatment requires a long-term process, and patients should be patient and not be in a hurry. In this process, the patient, in cooperation with the doctor, can minimize the dosage of medications with complete control of the disease.