It may be true that hernia surgery is not recommended for three types of people, mainly the three categories of debilitated elderly people, elderly people with certain chronic diseases and hernias in infants up to 1 year of age. A hernia is usually referred to as an inguinal hernia, which is a reproducible mass in the inguinal area and is usually a condition that requires surgical treatment to cure. Inguinal hernia is more likely to occur in older men who have a debilitated body, or who have some long-term chronic cough, chronic constipation, and prostatic hyperplasia with difficulty urinating. These two groups of patients do not improve the underlying cause of the disease, the pressure in the abdominal cavity continues to rise, the postoperative recurrence is very easy, and the body is too weak, may not be able to withstand the trauma of surgery. In addition, hernia surgery is not recommended for infants under the age of 1. Infants under the age of 1 may herniate when they cry too hard due to incomplete development, but the hernia defects may heal on their own as they grow older and develop their body functions. Therefore, surgery is also not recommended.