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MUN/International Conference on Precision Medicine and AI Healthcare
International Conference on Precision Medicine and AI Healthcare
Part of the International Conference on Precision Medicine and AI Healthcare series

International Conference on Precision Medicine and AI Healthcare

Prague, Czech Republic, Czechia · high-school

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Dates
Jul 27–2026 (day: 28)
Fee
TBD
Reg deadline
TBD
Delegates
24
Language
English
Format
In-person
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Summary

The International Conference on Precision Medicine and AI Healthcare convenes high school delegates in Prague to debate the intersection of artificial intelligence, genomics, and clinical care. Hosted in Czechia, the program brings together a small cohort of secondary-school participants to work through committee-style negotiations focused on the governance of emerging medical technologies. The conference's narrow thematic scope - precision medicine and AI in healthcare - distinguishes it from general-purpose Model UN gatherings. Rather than rotating through standard committees, delegates are expected to engage deeply with one of the most consequential policy frontiers of the decade: how societies regulate, deploy, and share the benefits of AI-driven diagnostics, treatment personalization, and biomedical data.

Why this edition matters in 2026

Precision medicine and AI healthcare sit at the centre of an unresolved global conversation. Governments are racing to draft frameworks for algorithmic accountability in clinical settings, while hospitals and research institutions experiment with tools whose risks and benefits are still being mapped. A simulation built around these themes asks delegates to grapple with questions that working diplomats and health ministers are themselves still answering. For a high-school audience, the topical focus is unusually advanced. Most introductory Model UN circuits emphasise broad geopolitical issues; here, students must learn the vocabulary of clinical trials, data governance, and biomedical ethics before they can negotiate effectively. That preparation burden is also the conference's pedagogical value - delegates leave with substantive technical literacy, not just procedural fluency. The choice of Prague as host city anchors the conversation in a European setting, where health policy and digital regulation are active domains of public debate. Delegates working through resolutions on AI healthcare will find their drafting shaped by the realities of operating in a continent where these issues are being actively legislated.

How to prepare

Strong delegates will arrive having read beyond Model UN briefing papers. The substantive ground here - genomic medicine, algorithmic bias in diagnostic tools, cross-border health data flows, equity in access to personalised therapies - rewards students who can cite specific cases, regulatory proposals, and clinical examples rather than speaking in generalities. A practical preparation arc begins with mapping the actors: which countries lead in biomedical research, which host the largest pharmaceutical and AI firms, which are advancing the most assertive regulatory frameworks, and which are pushing for technology transfer and equitable access. From there, delegates should build positions that reflect not just national interest but also alliance dynamics within their regional bloc. Because the delegation pool is small, every speech and amendment carries weight. Students should prepare to operate in a high-signal environment where committee work resembles a working group more than a plenary. Drafting skill - the ability to write precise, technically literate operative clauses - will matter more than rhetorical flourish. Finally, delegates should rehearse the ethical dimension. Precision medicine raises hard trade-offs between innovation and protection, between aggregated data utility and individual privacy, between speed-to-market and rigorous safety review. Resolutions that pretend these tensions do not exist will not survive scrutiny.

Eligibility deep-dive

Level
high-school
Age
Team size
Country quota
Open

Schedule & deadlines

  1. Conference

    Jul 27, 2026 – Jul 28, 2026

Frequently asked questions

  • Who is eligible to attend this conference?

    The conference is open to high-school level delegates, making it a secondary-school programme rather than a university-circuit event.

  • Where is the conference held?

    It takes place in Prague, the capital of Czechia, situated within the European region.

  • What makes this conference distinct from a general Model UN?

    Its format is built around a single thematic axis - precision medicine and AI in healthcare - rather than the broad committee menu typical of general-purpose conferences.

  • How large is the delegate cohort?

    The conference is designed as a small-scale gathering, which shapes the committee experience toward intensive working-group dynamics rather than large plenary debate.

  • Is there a registration deadline published?

    No specific deadline is published in the available source material; prospective delegates should consult the official application page for current cut-off information.

Last verified May 27, 2026 · Source: mymun.com

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