The Labour Affairs Bureau (DSAL) and the Education and Youth Development Bureau (DSEDJ) will co-host a job seminar on April 15 to help local youth better understand the development trends and career opportunities in the Big Health* industry, according to a DSAL statement yesterday.
Held under the theme “The Path to Entrepreneurship – Towards Big Health”, the seminar will start at 6:30 p.m. at the Youth Activities Centre in Areia Preta district, the statement said, adding that online registration opened yesterday and will run until April 13, with places available on a first-come, first-served basis.
The statement did not say whether attendance is free of charge or fee-based.
The seminar targets young locals, including secondary school students, interested in entering the Big Health sector, the statement noted. Guest speaker Tam Man Hou, partner and sales director of Trendyi Health Technology Limited, will elaborate on market opportunities and development trends, while analysing talent demands and required professional skills in the industry, the statement said, adding that he will also share practical experience in career planning and entrepreneurship.
The seminar is organised to align with the local government’s “1+4” economic diversification strategy and its “student career planning blueprint,” aiming to broaden participants’ career perspectives and support more informed academic and employment decisions, the statement said, noting that through case studies and professional insights, the session seeks to help young people develop innovative thinking and better understand the industry’s potential.
According to the statement, the seminar aims to promote stronger alignment between local talent and industry needs, contributing to the cultivation of a stable talent pool for emerging sectors. Interested participants are encouraged to register early via the Labour Affairs Bureau website (www.dsal.gov.mo).
*Big Health refers to large-scale, systemic approaches to health that focus on population-level outcomes rather than individual care. It emphasises prevention, public health policy, social determinants of health (education, housing, income), and interventions that affect whole communities or national populations. – Poe

This poster provided by the Labour Affairs Bureau (DSAL) yesterday promotes its Big Health job seminar on April 15 at the Youth Activities Centre in Areia Preta district.


