A job crisis among the young could test the economic leadership of the ruling Communist Party, which has repeatedly urged people to "listen to the party".
Finding jobs for young people is a top priority, President Xi Jinping said this year, as he expressed concern about their employment prospects.
Youth unemployment hit a record high of 21.3% in June last year, prompting China to halt publication of the closely watched benchmark, saying students still enrolled should be excluded.
There is no way to track all job seekers among those aged 16 to 24, but a spokesperson for the National Bureau of Statistics said last year that 33 million of them were seeking employment.
"The pressure on employment still exists," Liu Aihua, a spokesperson for the statistics bureau, told a press conference on Thursday, after data showed China's overall jobless rate rose to a four-month high in July.
"Key groups still face pressure (in finding work)."
In another scam that made headlines last month, a college student seeking a part-time job in food delivery was persuaded to sign a year-long contract to rent an electric bicycle.
A staffer at a bike rental shop who pretended to be a recruiter for popular food delivery service Meituan told the student that he had to rent a bike before starting the job.
A few weeks later, the student realised his earnings were far below the "tens of thousands" promised by the "recruiter" and he was barely able to scrape together the monthly rental.
"It's hard enough to find a job, and now we need to be careful about scams too," said one Weibo poster.
Authorities say the darkening outlook for jobs has prompted some students to become scammers themselves.
The first 10 months of 2023 saw an annual rise of 68% in the number of those younger than 18 who were prosecuted for phone and internet scams, the prosecuting agency said last November.
The incidents of young graduates with advanced college degrees joining scam syndicates also increased, it added in a report.
The Wuhan teenager's trauma was worsened by having to go under the knife a second time to remove the breast implants, his mother said on television.
"It pains me to see the two scars under my son's chest," she added.