Patients with Parkinson’s disease generally have a long disease duration, and long-term mobility problems and medication bring physical and mental exhaustion and despair. Long-term family care leads to a dependency mentality in Parkinson’s disease patients, but there is also a need to improve their long-term dependency mentality in the course of long-term treatment. Minimize the fear and pain caused by focusing on the disease by doing exercises to distract yourself. Doing housework is a good exercise to reduce the stress of family members and to exercise yourself. Generally speaking, Parkinson’s patients are not suitable for walking too far according to their condition, moving around the house or nearby, doing housework well, but also to use their brains. Exercise the brain, move the muscles and bones, but also a kind of self-exercise, the family psychological comfort, the family less worry, more a warm. Nowadays, rehabilitation has become an integral part of the treatment. If rehabilitation is started as early as possible, and the training is standardized and in place, the amount of medication required can be reduced accordingly, possibly delaying the onset of motor complications, which can greatly improve the patient’s quality of life. There is a “honeymoon period” for Parkinson’s medication, and many patients think about rehabilitation only after their disease has progressed to the middle and late stages, when their discomfort is uncontrollable and their quality of life is seriously affected. In fact, Parkinson’s disease patients are best to start rehab as soon as possible once they are diagnosed. Early formal Parkinson’s rehab can delay the use of certain medications, and proper rehab can extend the honeymoon period of Parkinson’s medications and maintain a longer time frame for self-care. Parkinson’s rehabilitation includes several major components of physical therapy, occupational therapy, and speech and swallowing therapy. Specifically, physical therapy focuses on exercise therapy, supplemented by physical therapy, and focuses on improving the patient’s balance, coordination, gait and relieving pain, with professional therapists guiding the patient to choose the appropriate exercise modality. And occupational therapy focuses on helping patients with cognitive training, hand function training, and guiding them to relearn dressing, dining, and bathing to further improve their ability to take care of themselves in daily life. Some patients with Parkinson’s disease will have symptoms such as drooling and choking on water when the disease progresses to the middle and late stages. Proper swallowing training can greatly reduce these symptoms and help patients to better eat and drink independently. And targeted speech training can help patients improve their verbal communication skills.