Patients with hemorrhoids do not need to be too nervous if they push in and out. If the hemorrhoid is soft, no clots are formed, and there is no pain or blood in the stool, it can be treated conservatively and medically, for example, by washing the anus with warm salt water to keep the skin around the anus in a clean state, or by taking oral medication to reduce swelling, or by applying hemorrhoid cream around the anus, or by inserting a hemorrhoid plug into the anus. All of these methods have anti-inflammatory, anti-swelling and hemostatic effects. However, if the hemorrhoid prolapses after being pushed out and forms a hard clot, it needs to be treated with surgery, which can be done by hemorrhoidectomy, thrombus stripping, and external and internal ligation of mixed hemorrhoids. In summary, when a patient’s hemorrhoids are pushed in and out, they need to be treated according to the condition of the hemorrhoids.