Disease management is a comprehensive and systematic approach to managing different disease states using a variety of technical integration tools to provide patients and health care providers with a complete treatment plan. This disease management is similar to the ancient Chinese medical practitioners’ emphasis on “treating the untreated” (if you don’t know what this term means, you can search for it on Baidu, which has a detailed explanation), which emphasizes prevention. Disease management is the systematic provision of follow-up interventions and management for chronic patients to help them improve their health and reduce the cost of health care, thereby reducing the cost of health care for society as a whole and improving the health status and index of the population. There is a reason for the emphasis on disease management. There is a need for more robust methods to identify chronic diseases such as coronary heart disease, hypertension, diabetes, osteoporosis, rheumatoid arthritis, etc., which account for the majority of overall health care costs. There is a need for more effective interventions to slow the progression of these conditions early in their development, before they become irreversible. Many chronic diseases can be controlled before symptoms appear by observing changes in biomedical indicators and taking appropriate control measures. However, the internal environmental conditions of our bodies vary from person to person, and the degree of improvement after treatment may vary widely. Chronic diseases occur and develop slowly and are the result of gradual changes in the biological indicators of the individual’s body under the influence of environmental and genetic factors. The development of some diseases is gradually manifested, as we often say, from quantitative changes to qualitative changes, when the qualitative changes occur, the disease becomes obvious. In the early stages there are no obvious diagnosable symptoms appearing, sometimes it is difficult for doctors to suggest what the disease is, and individuals are often unable to take preventive measures on their own initiative, which allows the disease to develop and worsen. In some cases, the disease is somewhat controlled but may not be monitored well enough to detect signs of recurrence in time. Therefore, a visit to the doctor sometimes does not fully reflect the dynamics of health if the examination is done only once. Even if a disease is clearly diagnosed, it may not always be safe and effective to follow the same medication regimen, so it needs to be adjusted gradually according to changes in the disease and the body’s internal environment. Although illness is terrible and we may not have the means to completely eradicate it, there are ways to put it in a cage. This is how disease management is done, through constant monitoring (monitoring can also be done as a job, similar to seeing if the flowers in the garden are blooming, but of course you don’t need to think about it every day and every hour, just periodically, or contact the doctor when you find something uncomfortable), and hitting it when you see it showing its head, and not letting it run out again. If you wait for it to come out and then hit it, sometimes it will accidentally break the jar. I personally believe that if the disease is well managed, many diseases can be controlled to a state that is almost equivalent to a cure. For example, if the blood uric acid is under 300umol/L, the chance of having another gout attack will be very small, and the risk of hypertension and diabetes will also decrease; if rheumatoid arthritis is effectively treated at an early stage and continues to be stable, the chance of joint deformity will be greatly reduced, as will ankylosing spondylitis; even for a serious disease like systemic lupus erythematosus, if it is well Even in severe diseases such as SLE, many of them can be managed well to achieve remission and return to work capacity, and long-term disease stabilization may even reach the realm of hormone reduction and discontinuation. But the prerequisite for all these good outcomes is good management and professional counseling guidance. Health, the first human need! The most important thing in maintaining health is to prevent disease and monitor it before it happens. Health management measures to maintain health based on changes in biomedical indicators in this process are effective measures to prevent the occurrence and development of chronic diseases.