Covid pandemic unleashed a 'pervasive danger', suggests harrowing new study - and it's not the virus

The pandemic and other stressors caused inflammation to spread through communities, a new study suggests

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Adam Chapman

By Adam Chapman


Published: 12/03/2024

- 16:29

Updated: 12/03/2024

- 17:00

Chronic stress and inflammation is spreading among populations at an unprecedented rate - and scientists may have diagnosed the problem

The Covid-19 pandemic and its response may have sent a wave of chronic stress and inflammation rippling through society that impaired our collective decision-making, a new study suggests.

The theory comes on the four-year anniversary of the World Health Organization (WHO) declaring the global Covid-19 outbreak to be a pandemic.


The pandemic saw the global mortality rate jump but hidden in these statistics are the indirect effects of the virus, many of which we are still living with today.

One of which is our physiological response to stressful events such as Covid. Stressors can cause chronic inflammation in our bodies. Chronic inflammation is linked to serious conditions such as cardiovascular disease and cancer – and may also affect our thinking and behaviour.

Man with his head in his hands

Chronic inflammation is linked to serious conditions such as cardiovascular disease

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And, according to a new hypothesis published in Frontiers in Science, the negative impacts of stress are not confined to individuals.

“We propose that stress, inflammation, and consequently impaired cognition in individuals can scale up to communities and populations,” explained lead author Prof Yoram Vodovotz of the University of Pittsburgh, USA.

“This could affect the decision-making and behaviour of entire societies, impair our cognitive ability to address complex issues like climate change, social unrest, and infectious disease – and ultimately lead to a self-sustaining cycle of societal dysfunction and environmental degradation,” he added.

The findings have implications for the purveyors of potentially stressful information, such as public health bodies and the 24-hour news cycle.

How stressors impact the body

One central premise to the hypothesis is an association between chronic inflammation and cognitive dysfunction.

“The cause of this well-known phenomenon is not currently known,” said Vodovotz. “We propose a mechanism, which we call the 'central inflammation map’.”

The authors’ novel idea is that the brain creates its own copy of bodily inflammation. Normally, this inflammation map allows the brain to manage the inflammatory response and promote healing.

When inflammation is high or chronic, however, the response goes awry and can damage healthy tissues and organs. The authors suggest the inflammation map could similarly harm the brain and impair cognition, emotion, and behaviour.

Person pointing their remote at the TV

Information overload is contributing to the diffusion of stress-induced inflammation, researchers warn

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A second premise is the spread of chronic inflammation from individuals to populations.

“While inflammation is not contagious per se, it could still spread via the transmission of stress among people,” explained Vodovotz.

The authors further suggest that stress is being transmitted faster than ever before, through social media and other digital communications.

“People are constantly bombarded with high levels of distressing information, be it the news, negative online comments, or a feeling of inadequacy when viewing social media feeds,” said Vodovotz. “We hypothesise that this new dimension of human experience, from which it is difficult to escape, is driving stress, chronic inflammation, and cognitive impairment across global societies.”

These ideas shift our view of inflammation as a biological process restricted to an individual. Instead, the authors see it as a multiscale process linking molecular, cellular, and physiological interactions in each of us to altered decision-making and behaviour in populations – and ultimately to large-scale societal and environmental impacts.

“Stress-impaired judgment could explain the chaotic and counter-intuitive responses of large parts of the global population to stressful events such as climate change and the Covid-19 pandemic,” explained Vodovotz.

“An inability to address these and other stressors may propagate a self-fulfilling sense of pervasive danger, causing further stress, inflammation, and impaired cognition in a runaway, positive feedback loop,” he added.

The fact that current levels of global stress have not led to widespread societal disorder could indicate an equally strong stabilizing effect from “controllers” such as trust in laws, science, and multinational organizations like the United Nations.

“However, societal norms and institutions are increasingly being questioned, at times rightly so as relics of a foregone era,” said Prof Paul Verschure of Radboud University, the Netherlands, and a co-author of the article. “The challenge today is how we can ward off a new adversarial era of instability due to global stress caused by a multi-scale combination of geopolitical fragmentation, conflicts, and ecological collapse amplified by existential angst, cognitive overload, and runaway disinformation.”

Stress testing their hypothesis

The authors developed a mathematical model to test their ideas and explore ways to reduce stress and build resilience.

“Preliminary results highlight the need for interventions at multiple levels and scales,” commented co-author Prof Julia Arciero of Indiana University, USA.

“While anti-inflammatory drugs are sometimes used to treat medical conditions associated with inflammation, we do not believe these are the whole answer for individuals,” said Dr David Katz, co-author and a specialist in preventive and lifestyle medicine based in the US. “Lifestyle changes such as healthy nutrition, exercise, and reducing exposure to stressful online content could also be important.”

“The dawning new era of precision and personalised therapeutics could also offer enormous potential,” he added.

At the societal level, the authors suggest creating calm public spaces and providing education on the norms and institutions that keep our societies stable and functioning.

“While our 'inflammation map' hypothesis and corresponding mathematical model are a start, a coordinated and interdisciplinary research effort is needed to define interventions that would improve the lives of individuals and the resilience of communities to stress. We hope our article stimulates scientists around the world to take up this challenge,” Vodovotz concluded.

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