Werbung - LEO ohne Werbung? LEO Pur
LEO

Sie scheinen einen AdBlocker zu verwenden.

Wollen Sie LEO unterstützen?

Dann deaktivieren Sie AdBlock für LEO, spenden Sie oder nutzen Sie LEO Pur!

 
  •  
  • Betreff

    leichter Krankheitsverlauf

    Quellen

    Ich weiß, dass Krankheitsverlauf 'course of disease' ist, aber wie kriege ich 'leicht' dazu? Alles, was mir einfällt, klingt blöd IMO.


    Z.B. "Bei leichtem Krankheitsverlauf ist keine Hospitalisierung nötig."

    Verfasser Gibson (418762) 20 Aug. 21, 10:34
    Kommentar

    mild

    bzw. mild disease course / course of disease

    #1Verfasser WittGenStein (1323045)  20 Aug. 21, 10:35
    Kommentar

    auch: mild course of (the) disease

    covid mild disease course site:co.uk

    #2Verfasser penguin (236245) 20 Aug. 21, 10:43
    Kommentar

    Super, danke. Auf 'mild' bin ich nicht gekommen.

    #3Verfasser Gibson (418762) 20 Aug. 21, 10:49
    Kommentar
    I personally might keep 'mild' and lose 'course,' which exists but is not typically used as much. 'Mild illness' should get hits, and a verb plus an adjective might get more than any large abstract noun: 'if the illness remains mild,' etc.

    'Mild (to moderate) symptoms' is another frequent collocation.
    #4Verfasser hm -- us (236141)  20 Aug. 21, 12:19
    Kommentar

    Thank you too. Yes, 'symptoms' rings a bell now that I read it.

    #5Verfasser Gibson (418762) 20 Aug. 21, 14:10
    Kommentar

    Just to say that "course of disease" and "clinical course" (how the disease behaves over time) are standard medical collocations. Not always the same as "symptoms" at any one time.

    #6Verfasser Marianne (BE) (237471)  20 Aug. 21, 20:31
    Kommentar

    I'd suggest "a mild case" (of Covid-19 or whatever). "A mild course of disease" may be used by doctors, but it doesn't sound very colloquial to my ears. FWIW. I don't know who the "audience" is here.


    In/With mild cases no hospitalization...

    #7Verfasser wupper (354075)  20 Aug. 21, 20:53
    Kommentar

    Thank you both. I actually need both, a 'professional' expression and something people would just say in conversation, so this is a really helpful thread.

    #8Verfasser Gibson (418762)  20 Aug. 21, 21:32
     
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  
 
 
 
 
 ­ automatisch zu ­ ­ umgewandelt