Still Dying:

The Persistent Excess Deaths No One Will Investigate

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A Message from Dr. McMillan

One of the most disappointing lessons of the pandemic has been how many individuals and institutions appeared to support narratives that offered no clear benefit — and may even have caused harm. At times, it’s hard to understand why anyone would continue down a path that doesn’t serve the public.

But then you realize something uncomfortable: acknowledging mistakes carries a cost. For any system — scientific, political, or bureaucratic — admitting error can feel more threatening than staying the course.

And when the cost of honesty is high, the easiest strategy becomes silence.

Dr. Philip McMillan

In this week's November 28th, 2025 update:

  • Covid-19: Persistent excess deaths no one will investigate

  • Vejon: This week’s featured Vejon video

  • Disease: First human bird-flu death

  • Infographic: Still dying?

  • News: Medical news in brief

  • Education: McMillan ROOT spike detox protocol

    Read time: 6 minutes

FEATURE ARTICLE

COVID-19

  • UK death rates remain elevated above 2015–2019 trends; the expected post-pandemic drop in mortality to below the trend line has not never never materialized.

  • German autopsy study: 20% of 25 sudden post-vaccination deaths showed acute myocarditis; average time to death was 2.5 days.

  • Cardiac tissue lacked regulatory T cells (FOXP3+) - the immune system's "brakes" - indicating inflammation running without restraint.

  • Spike-producing cells shield themselves from attack; frustrated immune cells destroy surrounding healthy heart tissue, creating arrhythmia-causing scars.

Why this is important: Thousands of unexplained deaths continue occurring above historical norms, yet authorities have recalculated baselines to obscure the pattern. Autopsy evidence suggests a mechanism: immune cells, primed by vaccination then re-triggered by infection, attack heart tissue rather than spike-producing cells. Without systematic investigation, this potential cause remains unaddressed.

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DISEASE

First Human Bird-Flu Death from H5N5
Authors: Ed Hutchinson, University of Glasgow

  • First human H5N5 case: Washington state resident infected in November 2025; patient died November 21 after severe respiratory illness.

  • H5N5 is high-pathogenicity bird flu: Similar to H5N1, found in wild birds worldwide; rarely infects humans from backyard poultry.

  • No human-to-human transmission detected: This appears to be isolated spillover event with low current risk to wider population.

  • Monitoring for potential pandemic continues: Scientists watch for adaptation signs; most avian flu human infections remain one-off occurrences.

Why this is important: The first human H5N5 infection proves bird flu viruses can jump species in unexpected ways. While this single fatal case doesn't signal imminent pandemic risk, it demonstrates why continuous surveillance matters: each spillover event gives influenza another chance to adapt for human transmission. Scientists must watch carefully as multiple avian flu strains circulate simultaneously in wild birds and poultry worldwide.

INFOGRAPHIC

EDUCATION

McMillan ROOT Spike Detox Protocol

You don’t have to settle for feeling anything less than your best. The McMillan ROOT Spike Detox Protocol is designed to give you a clear roadmap to better health and lasting results. Complete our survey, get the link on submission to book a Check-In meeting with Dr McMillan and start your journey back to health. Note that all meetings are scheduled in UK time.

MEDICAL NEWS IN BRIEF

NEWS HIGHLIGHTS

🚥 Bird Flu Viruses Are Resistant to Fever, Making Them a Major Threat to Humans: Fever is one of your body's key defenses against flu. But bird flu evolved in hosts with naturally high body temperatures, making it resistant to human fever. This heat tolerance may explain why bird flu is so deadly in humans and reveals a worrying gap in our immune protection. [SOURCE]

🚥 Root Canals and Blood Sugar: The Connection You Probably Haven’t Heard Of: Dentists treating deep tooth infections may inadvertently improve their patients' blood sugar control. This connection reveals that oral health directly influences metabolic disease, suggesting routine dental care could play an unexpected role in managing diabetes. The mouth and body aren't separate systems; inflammation from a single infected tooth can affect how your entire body regulates glucose.

🚥 A Two-Minute Fix for Procrastination: Procrastination often triggers shame, but naming your emotions, breaking tasks into smaller steps, and pairing effort with small rewards can tip the mental scales toward action in just two minutes. This reframes avoidance as a momentary hurdle rather than a character flaw, replacing guilt with a practical starting strategy. [SOURCE]

🚥 Human Brains Are Preconfigured with Instructions for Understanding the World: Before a baby ever sees light or hears sound, its brain is already firing in structured patterns. Lab-grown brain tissue reveals humans arrive with a built-in neural "operating system"—a genetic blueprint for navigating the world. This discovery could transform how we understand developmental disorders and test for toxic effects on growing brains. [SOURCE]

🚥 Gut Microbes May Have Links with Sleep Deprivation: Fragments from gut bacteria may reach the brain and influence sleep patterns. While this mouse research has limitations for human translation, it opens new questions about how our microbiome affects rest, suggesting the body's systems are more interconnected than previously understood.

🚥 Reducing Social Media Use for Just a Week Can Improve Mental Health: Young adults who cut social media to 30 minutes daily for one week experienced notable drops in anxiety, depression, and insomnia. Those with compulsive scrolling habits or tendencies toward negative comparison saw the greatest gains. This suggests targeted digital breaks could become a practical tool in youth mental health treatment. [SOURCE]

BOOK NOOK

Set within a child’s nose, ‘Humming Heroes’ features a family of Lymphocytes led by a wise Mother, brave Father, determined Brother, and heroic Baby, confronting invading microorganisms. The story takes an imaginative turn, when a humming melody combines with the Lymphocytes’ song to repel the invaders and restore inner harmony.

"Disease X: Are You Prepared?" is your comprehensive guide to navigating the uncertain future of global health. Drawing from experience and the latest scientific insights, this book offers:

  • Practical strategies for personal and community preparedness.

  • Lessons learned from COVID-19 and other outbreaks.

  • Actionable steps to boost resilience against emerging health threats.

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