Whether or not death will occur if treatment is abandoned for a brain hemorrhage depends mainly on the amount of brain hemorrhage and the location of the hemorrhage. If the patient has a large amount of bleeding and the location of the bleeding is located in, for example, the brainstem, thalamus, or basal ganglia, then there is a high probability that the patient will die if treatment is abandoned. This is because bleeding in these locations can cause instability in the patient’s respiratory and circulatory functions, and the respiratory instability can further aggravate the brain damage. If the brain hemorrhage located in other locations, such as the external capsule, cerebellum, parietal lobe, frontal lobe, etc., the hemorrhage is relatively large, and abandoning treatment may also cause the patient to die, unless the patient’s vital signs are stable and abandoning treatment still has the possibility of survival. Therefore, it depends mainly on the specific situation.