The post-pandemic health signal is broad, connected, and largely unexamined.
This is the intellectual core of the work: a mechanism-first way of reading what has changed in population health since the pandemic — and why so much of it points back to a shared origin.
If a single disturbance touches the immune system, the gut, the vasculature and the brain, then conditions we treat as separate may be chapters of one story — and the data should show it.
Most public discussion of post-pandemic health moves between two unsatisfying poles: isolated symptoms with no explanation, and isolated studies with no connection. Neither tells you how to think.
A framework does something more useful. It proposes how the pieces relate — so that each new finding can be placed, tested and either strengthened or set aside. The goal is not certainty. It is a structure clear enough to interpret evidence as it arrives.
- Immune dysregulation as the starting point
- Gut–immune–inflammation interactions
- Endothelial and vascular involvement
- Macrophage-driven inflammatory persistence
- Pathways into chronic, metabolic and neurodegenerative disease
- Population-level expression in admission and mortality data
COVID STORM, explained.
The framework treats persistent immune activation as a plausible common thread linking conditions usually studied in isolation — from cardiovascular and metabolic disease to cognitive decline.
It is deliberately a lens, not a verdict. It organises questions and evidence; it does not claim to settle them. That distinction matters, clinically and scientifically.
Read the full framework at McMillan Research →Four mechanisms the framework keeps returning to.
Persistent immune activation
Why an immune response that does not fully resolve may drive symptoms long after the original trigger has gone.
Endothelial & vascular damage
How disruption to the blood-vessel lining connects seemingly unrelated organ effects.
The gut–immune axis
The role of the gut in sustaining — or calming — systemic inflammation.
Inflammation & the brain
The link between chronic inflammatory states and longer-term cognitive and neurodegenerative risk.
From hypothesis to population signal.
Clinical intuition raises a question; only data can test it. The research programme examines hospital admission patterns, chronic disease trajectories and related indicators [datasets & scale — confirm] to ask whether the signal is real and broad.
That analysis lives in the dashboards and premium briefings at McMillan Research — built so professionals and serious readers can interrogate the evidence themselves.
View the dashboard →- Admission and trend visualisations [confirm]
- Chronic disease trajectory analysis
- Executive and professional briefings
- Premium subscriber insight
The framework is grounded in published research.
For readers who want precision.
What is the COVID STORM framework? +
What is immune dysregulation? +
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Regular analysis connecting new research to what it means for real health decisions — in plain language, grounded in mechanism.
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