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The One-Dose Signal:
The Leaked Plan to Track Vaccine Injuries and the Court Order That Killed It


A Message from Dr. McMillan
The scientific community sometimes prioritizes the protection of scientific narratives over the fully investigation of patient outcomes, and that imbalance creates blind spots.
When medical conditions are not formally defined or coded, they remain effectively invisible - unmeasured, under-researched, and poorly managed.
The failure to establish clear diagnostic pathways for potential COVID vaccine–related injuries highlights a deeper structural problem that risks leaving patients without answers or support.
Dr. Philip McMillan
In this week's March 27th, 2026 update:
Covid-19: The leaked plan to track vaccine injuries
Vejon: This week’s featured Vejon video
Health: Vagus nerve stimulation may protect against Alzheimer's
Infographic: The one-dose signal
News: Medical news in brief
Education: Post COVID phenotypes - What makes you unique?
Read time: 6 minutes
FEATURE ARTICLE
COVID-19
The One-Dose Signal: The Leaked Plan to Track Vaccine Injuries and the Court Order That Killed It
Authors: Dr. Philip McMillan, John McMillan
UK data shows single-dose vaccine recipients have the worst non-COVID mortality, especially ages 18 to 39.
A leaked ACIP document proposed a clinical framework and ICD code for chronic post-vaccination syndrome.
A federal court injunction cancelled the March 2026 ACIP meeting, freezing all discussion of the proposal.
Over a third of vaccinated survey respondents reported side effects, with 10% describing them as major.
Why this is important: A leaked federal advisory document proposed recognizing chronic post-vaccination injuries with a formal diagnostic code. Before the committee could act, a court injunction halted the meeting. Meanwhile, UK mortality data reveals a troubling pattern among single-dose recipients that remains uninvestigated, deepening public distrust in vaccine safety oversight.
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ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE
Vagus Nerve Stimulation May Protect Against Alzheimer's by Targeting Early Brain Changes
Author: Elizabeth Riley, Cornell University
Alzheimer's-related tau protein buildup begins in the locus coeruleus as early as age 30.
The locus coeruleus produces nearly all brain norepinephrine, essential for memory, sleep, and immune function.
Vagus nerve stimulation is already FDA-approved for epilepsy, migraine, and depression treatment.
A trial of 52 people with mild cognitive impairment showed meaningful memory improvements after six months.
Why this is important: Alzheimer's disease may begin decades before symptoms appear, with toxic tau proteins accumulating in a tiny brain region called the locus coeruleus. Stimulating the vagus nerve, which connects directly to this region, shows early promise in preserving memory and could offer a non-drug approach to slowing cognitive decline.
INFOGRAPHIC
EDUCATION
This short tool maps symptom patterns and highlights which systems may need attention first - because with Post-COVID patterns, order of therapy often matters more than severity of symptoms.
If you’re living with ongoing symptoms or know someone who is, I would encourage you to click on the link, create a record of your symptoms and learn more about what they may mean.
MEDICAL NEWS IN BRIEF
NEWS HIGHLIGHTS
🚥 Mediterranean-Style MIND Diet Linked to Less Brain Shrinkage and Lower Dementia Risk: A Framingham Heart Study analysis reveals that older adults closely following the MIND diet, which blends Mediterranean and DASH eating patterns, retain more grey matter and experience less brain shrinkage. Berries and poultry showed the strongest protective effects, suggesting specific food choices may help preserve cognitive function during aging. [SOURCE]
🚥 Cohabiting Couples Share Up to 30% of Their Gut Bacteria, Influencing Each Other's Health: Living with a partner reshapes your microbiome in ways that may affect long-term health. Cohabiting couples share significant proportions of gut, oral, and skin bacteria, often gaining greater microbial diversity. While this diversity is generally protective against cardiovascular and metabolic diseases, some shared species carry mixed health effects. [SOURCE]
🚥 Autoantibodies From Long COVID Patients Transfer Symptoms to Mice, Pointing to an Autoimmune Driver: Researchers at UMC Utrecht and Amsterdam UMC demonstrated that antibodies from long COVID patients can transfer symptoms to mice, providing functional evidence of an autoimmune mechanism. Different patient subgroups produced distinct symptom patterns, suggesting long COVID encompasses multiple biological conditions requiring personalized treatment approaches. [SOURCE]
🚥 Passion Fruit Compound Alpha-Amyrin Protects Brain Cells and Improves Memory in Alzheimer's Mouse Models: University of Oslo researchers discovered that alpha-amyrin, a compound abundant in passion fruit, acts as a cellular guardian in the brain. By activating a waste-removal pathway that clears damaged mitochondria, it reduced Alzheimer's-related protein buildup and restored memory in mice, offering a promising new drug candidate. [SOURCE]
🚥 Walking Pace Outperforms Blood Pressure and Cholesterol in Predicting Death Risk Among Those With Existing Conditions: University of Leicester researchers found that self-reported walking pace predicted mortality more accurately than traditional clinical markers like blood pressure and cholesterol, particularly in people with existing health conditions. Incorporating basic physical behavior measures into routine assessments could improve risk identification and help target preventive interventions more effectively. [SOURCE]
🚥 Scientists Map a Gut-to-Brain Pathway That Explains Why Infections Kill Your Appetite: UCSF researchers, led by Nobel laureate David Julius, traced how the gut tells the brain to stop eating during parasitic infection. Two rare cell types communicate using neuron-like signaling to activate the vagus nerve. Understanding this pathway could open new treatment avenues for irritable bowel syndrome and chronic visceral pain. [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:
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