Sixty percent of women infected with gonorrhea are asymptomatic or have mild symptoms. Gonococcus in women can be judged as cured when all symptoms and signs disappear within 2 weeks after the end of treatment without a history of sexual contact, as well as when the gonococcal re-test is negative 4-7 days after the end of treatment. Early symptoms of gonococcus include frequent urination, urgent urination, painful urination, redness and swelling of the urethral orifice, and thin mucus flow, which worsens after 24 hours, and the discharge increases to yellow pus, with symptoms of urethral irritation, sometimes accompanied by inguinal lymphadenitis. Gonorrhea can be cured by timely and standardized treatment, but gonorrhea is prone to recurrence, so gonorrhea medication needs to be adequate and full course of treatment to reduce gonorrhea recurrence. Patients with gonorrhea need to do bacteriological culture and drug sensitivity test to treat gonorrhea in a targeted manner, and the course of medication should be at least 2 weeks. For recurrent gonorrhea, the course of treatment should be no less than 2 months, and early application of infusion drugs should be accompanied by oral drugs to enhance treatment. Gonorrhea should be treated in a timely and standardized manner, and after the treatment is finished, attention should be paid to the review, and sexual intercourse is forbidden before the complete cure is judged.