After hernia laparoscopic repair surgery, you can normally start working after one month, while manual laborers can take more than three months before they can go to work. Although hernia laparoscopic repair is mildly painful, quick to recover, and less invasive, it is also performed on weak and defective areas of the inguinal canal. The process of fusion of the patch with the body’s tissues usually takes three months. Ordinary cerebral workers in do not cause an increase in intra-abdominal pressure since they do not need to bear weight. They are usually able to work normally within a month or so. Manual laborers, such as porters, should also try to avoid weight bearing for three months after surgery. Therefore, for manual workers who have laparoscopic hernia repair, it is important that the patch is fully integrated into the body within three months so that its local tissues are stabilized, so that they can continue to work, otherwise it will lead to the reappearance of the hernia. In your daily life, you should pay attention to regular medical checkups, go to the hospital in time if you feel unwell, and develop regular eating and living habits. Conditions that tend to cause increased abdominal pressure, such as constipation, prostate hypertrophy, chronic bronchitis, etc., should be treated.