The development of hernias in women is not uncommon and should be taken seriously enough. When it comes to hernias, most people think of small boys or older men, commonly known as small bowel strangulation. Few people pay attention to whether women can also get hernia, our department in the past two years, more than 2000 patients hospitalized for surgery, statistics show that nearly 25% of the patients are women! In particular, women accounted for 55% of patients with abdominal wall incisional hernias, while the proportion of women with umbilical hernias was as high as 90%! A hernia, simply understood, is a skinned down abdominal organ that burrows through a weak hole in the abdominal wall to the outside of the abdominal wall, as if the inner tube of a car tire protrudes due to a rupture of the outer tube. It is a very common surgical condition that has anatomical predispositions and associated therapeutic triggers that induce an increase in abdominal pressure. In inguinal hernias, the incidence is significantly higher in men than in women. The reason for this is that men have a spermatic cord that runs through the inguinal region to connect with the testicles in the scrotum, so there is a natural hole in the inguinal region that creates the conditions for the development of a hernia. However, this is not exclusive to men, women can also get inguinal hernia, because in the general anatomy of the female groin area, like men, there is a weak area known as the “pubococcygeal muscle pore area”, this area has very little muscle, most of which is covered by the fascia, and the hernia will appear when congenital dysplasia or old age and frailty. Moreover, the female inguinal area is not empty; it is crossed by the round ligament of the uterus, which, although it poses a much lower risk of developing a hernia than the spermatic cord in men, can also be a favorable site for hernias. In addition, in the development of incisional hernia, the weakness of the abdominal wall and the underdevelopment of the muscle groups are female predisposing factors that lead to incisional hernia at the incision site after abdominal surgery, so that more than half of the incisional hernia patients we admit are women. Pregnancy, on the other hand, is a female-specific hernia trigger, and most umbilical hernias are associated with this, so the vast majority of our umbilical hernia patients are female. This shows that female hernias, a problem that has been given less attention, should really be looked at, as women can get hernias, and, in some cases, even more than men.