Normal people’s thinking is subjectively controlled by themselves, while some schizophrenic patients feel that their thinking is not under their control, or experience that their thinking no longer belongs to them, but is controlled by an external force. This means that the patient feels that his/her thinking does not belong to him/her, that his/her thinking activity has lost its autonomy, or that it is controlled by an external force. Examples of such experiences include thought deprivation, thought insertion, and thought broadcasting. Thought insertion, thought deprivation, and thought dispersion are common in the early stages of schizophrenia and in the fully developed stage of symptoms. The key to preventing relapse: taking medication on time 1. Early treatment: treating a disease right away is not a problem for other diseases, but not for people with mental illness. Studies have found that there is a 1.5-year hesitation period between the onset of schizophrenia and treatment, and many patients don’t think they are sick at first. In other words, the average patient has an onset of 1.5 years before going to the doctor for treatment. Schizophrenia must be treated as early as possible, but it is never too late to start treatment. This is to follow the principle of “mending the fold after a sheep is lost”. 2, psychiatric specialty treatment, supplemented by other treatment: many patients with mental illness, often go to other departments first, such as traditional Chinese medicine, neurology, internal medicine, etc., lost the opportunity to let the most professional doctors to intervene as soon as possible. Therefore, psychiatrists should be the main focus, and must first go to see a psychiatrist. 3.Medication is the main treatment, supplemented by psychological and social treatment: medication is the most important. The reason why schizophrenic patients can’t follow the treatment well, experts believe that in addition to economic factors, prejudice may be a reason, some patients are afraid of the side effects of drugs, think that after taking these drugs will become stupid, dull, and mentally get control. In fact, there are now some new drugs, like amisulpride and so on. These new drugs have significantly lower side effects and can reduce the patient’s sense of shame. 4, drug treatment must be “enough, time enough”: the first onset of the patient to adhere to the drug for one to two years, the average is about two years. The second onset of the disease, the continuous use of drugs for about five years, if three times the onset of the disease or the past condition has never been relieved, most likely need to life-long use of drugs. Patients must have enough patience to treat and seize the golden period of treatment. If continuous treatment is given for one year, the risk of relapse is only 3%, otherwise 77% of patients will relapse within one year. Otherwise, 77% of patients will relapse within one year. 95% of patients will relapse within two years. Of course, treating the symptoms of the disease is only part of the equation for people with schizophrenia. Rehabilitation is essential to get the patient back into society and back into the home. Much more needs to be done in this area beyond medication, including improving the social environment and eliminating discrimination.