Hip fracture is one of the most common osteoporotic fractures in the elderly, which is also known as the “last adult fracture” by western scholars, meaning that hip fracture may be the last fracture in an adult’s life, and many people will lose their lives as a result. Regarding the treatment of hip fracture, scholars at home and abroad tend to agree that early surgical treatment is advocated to facilitate the patient to be on the ground as soon as possible, so as to reduce a series of complications arising from long-term bed rest. However, hip fractures are mostly seen in elderly people over 60 years of age, and they are associated with more medical diseases, so the risk of surgery is often greater. Surgery is very risky, right? Recent studies have confirmed that there is no significant correlation between the patient’s age, gender, coexisting diseases, and mode of injury and the patient’s high mortality rate. Ultra-advanced age and dementia only suggest that patients need long-term post-operative care. (The highest age of patients cured of intertrochanteric femur fractures at Xuanwu Hospital was 100 years) According to an article in Arch Orthop Trauma Surg, even ultra-advanced patients can benefit from surgery, which is significantly more effective than conservative treatment and is sufficiently probable to achieve good results to make it an option. The study showed that all patients with hip fractures had the potential to benefit from surgery and did not find any group of patients who should be treated conservatively, even in the very old patients with multiple coexisting conditions, and the results did not indicate that surgery was a contraindication to treatment, with a significant number of them surviving and being discharged home after surgery. Preoperatively, 3 days after surgery for left intertrochanteric fracture 3 months after surgery, fracture healed