Rehabilitation professionals (a) Professionals Rehabilitation physicians, rehabilitation nurses, rehabilitation therapists (including physiotherapists, occupational therapists, speech therapists, psychotherapists, prosthetists and orthotists, cultural and physical therapists, social workers) and other professionals form the rehabilitation treatment team, with the rehabilitation physician as the team leader. (2) Rehabilitation ward The facilities in the ward should be convenient for daily activities of hemiplegic patients, such as using pressure type hot water bottle, sitting toilet, door handle and faucet switch with easy to hold style, etc. The patient’s clothes should be loose and fat, simple and easy to wear, and the design of clothes buckle and trouser belt should be easy for the patient to use. 1. General status: such as the patient’s general status, age, comorbidities, past history, functional status of major organs, etc. 2. Neurological status: including state of consciousness, cognition, speech impairment and degree of physical disability, etc. 3.Psychological status: including depression, anxiety, anxiety state, patient personality, etc. 4.Personal quality and family conditions: such as the patient’s hobbies, occupation, education, economic conditions, family environment, the patient’s relationship with family members, etc. 5. Natural recovery of lost functions: make predictions. (ii) Determine rehabilitation goals Individualized goals are set according to the condition, which can be divided into immediate and long-term goals. The former is the goal to be achieved at 1 month of treatment, and the latter is the final goal to be achieved after 3 months of treatment (e.g., partially independent living, mostly independent living, completely independent living, return to family, return to society, etc.). Rehabilitation assessment after stroke is the basis of rehabilitation treatment, which can objectively and accurately assess the nature, location, scope, severity, extent, development trend, prognosis and regression of functional impairment. Such assessment should be conducted at least once before, during and after treatment, and based on the assessment results, treatment plans should be formulated and modified and objective evaluation of rehabilitation treatment effects should be made. Rehabilitation goals are set by a rehabilitation team based on the results of the rehabilitation assessment. Its composition includes personnel from the medical, nursing, physical therapy, exercise therapy, occupational therapy, speech therapy, clinical psychology and social rehabilitation departments. Rehabilitation goals are set according to each patient’s specific functional impairment, disability, and social disadvantage. Under the leadership of the clinical rehabilitation physician, a collaborative meeting is held to set specific rehabilitation goals, and the goals are decomposed into specific implementation departments, and a daily rehabilitation program is arranged. After a period of time, the patient’s condition should be revised, because there is a distance between the initial goal and the actual goal, so an evaluation meeting should be held every 2-4 weeks for each patient to evaluate whether the goal has been achieved. C. Assessment of functional impairment in stroke The common functional impairment in stroke: motor impairment (hemiparesis, bilateral paresis), sensory impairment, speech impairment, cognitive impairment, psychological impairment, impairment in activities of daily living, social participation and urinary and faecal impairment, etc. should be assessed by the international common scale. There are three levels of functional impairment after stroke: impairement, which is the absence or abnormality of physiological and anatomical structures and motor functions; disability, which is the limitation, absence or inability to perform a task properly; and handicap, which is the inability to participate fully in social activities, i.e., the basic rights of a person are affected. Handicap is a condition in which an individual is unable to participate fully in social activities, i.e., a person’s basic right activities are affected.