What is schizophrenia Schizophrenia (schizophrenia) is the most common type of mental illness characterized by basic personality changes, splitting of thinking, emotions, and behavior, and incompatibility between mental activities and the environment. At present, there are many people who have a deep-seated fear of and discrimination against mental illness, especially schizophrenic patients. Because of the misinterpretation of this illness, patients and their families are paying back the emotional price. Often family members are reluctant to talk about it, and people with schizophrenia often believe they have no friends or no employment opportunities. The illness is often associated with violence and homelessness. A small percentage of patients have conduct disorders, which lead to overt violence and direct outbursts against themselves or others. Although these incidents are rare, they can generate significant media attention, which can negatively impact schizophrenia. Schizophrenia is a severe and gradually declining psychosis in which the patient seems to lose touch with reality, has difficulty identifying subjective from objective, severely impairs the workforce, and has a profoundly negative impact on their personal development and on their family and society at large. It is a chronic disease, which mostly starts in young adulthood and has a recurrent and prolonged course, causing great mental suffering to patients and their families. They stop school prematurely, lose their jobs, or have their families broken up, which has a huge impact on their lives. In addition the cost of expensive schizophrenia treatment imposes a huge financial burden on both the individual and the country. How can these problems be solved? Then early detection and early intervention and treatment are very important If the patient has a short onset and is diagnosed with schizophrenia for the first time, early treatment with new antipsychotic drugs with comprehensive efficacy and low side effects is the key to treating the disease and early recovery. Especially for patients with onset in adolescence, the only way to keep the disease from affecting their future prospects is to quickly control their symptoms and restore their ability to study, work and live as soon as possible. The main reason for the acute deterioration of the disease in a certain period of time is that the patient may not maintain the medication properly, the dose is too low, or the medication may be stopped or withdrawn suddenly. Even acute relapses occur with drug therapy. Each relapse will aggravate the disease, treatment will be more difficult, and repeated attacks lead to a gradual decline in the patient’s social function. Anyone who has seen the Oscar-winning film “A Beautiful Mind” ((A Beatiful in Mind) based on the true story of the 1994 Nobel Prize winning economist Nash (Jr. John Forbe Nash) knows that treatment for schizophrenia can change everything about it, can change hopelessness, and bring hope and miracles. Nash, a mathematician, showed outstanding mathematical talent as a young man, but his schizophrenia prevented him from advancing to higher levels of academia. Faced with a challenge that had devastated many, Nash, with the help of his loving wife and the treatment of his doctors, was undaunted and resilient. He eventually overcame this misfortune and was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1994. Therefore, having schizophrenia is not scary, what is scary is people’s ignorance or fear of the consequences of this disease. I believe that with the call of a loving heart, every person with schizophrenia can recover and even gain the important value of his or her life.