Whether or not a fracture will have a significant impact on a person’s life depends on the location of the fracture, the degree of fracture, and whether the fracture is combined with damage to internal organs, blood vessels, or nerves. If the fracture is a closed fracture of a limb, after manipulation, splinting and fixation, taking bone grafting, and functional exercises, the fracture usually heals in about three months, then it will have little effect on the person’s life, and after recovery, the person will work and live like a normal person. However, if the fracture occurs in the spine, skull, pelvis, combined with internal organ injury, such as concussion, cerebral contusion, spinal cord injury combined with paraplegia, pelvic fracture combined with bladder rupture, rectal rupture, urethra rupture, or puncture blood vessels, nerves, will lead to paraplegia, numbness of the limbs, muscle atrophy, bladder dysfunction of urinary function, rectal dysfunction of defecation and so on, such as the complications, so that the impact on life is greater. This will have a greater impact on the life of the patient.