MISTRAL has released the Stakeholder Recommendations Document emerging from the workshop “AI Digital Policy for Just Health – How to Value and Deliver Innovation”, held in Kraków on 21–22 May 2025 and hosted by AGH University of Science and Technology.
The workshop marked the first step in a broader roadmap to integrate trustworthy AI, predictive modelling, and citizen participation into Just Health governance, with a focus on the project’s territorial dialogues in Apulia (Taranto) and Silesia (Rybnik).
The document consolidates the key issues, shared priorities, and operational needs expressed by regional authorities, scientific experts, and members of the Scientific Advisory Board.
It highlights four central areas where AI and data-driven innovation can support more equitable environmental-health decision-making:
- Transparent and reliable AI governance, including documentation of uncertainty and continuous model monitoring;
- Strengthened citizen participation, through structured citizen science and local engagement networks;
- Effective territorial uptake, ensuring that MISTRAL indicators and models align with regional planning instruments;
- Sustainable innovation pathways, including certification routes, public–private partnerships, and federated learning for secure collaboration.
The recommendations will guide the development of the MISTRAL Policy & Innovation Roadmap, practical guidelines for regional authorities, and the refinement of predictive tools and participatory methodologies.
Download the Stakeholder Recommendations Document (the PDF will be made available once the public authorities sign it)