As the coronavirus pandemic continues, we’re learning more about how different groups experience COVID-19. Everyone is talking about mild, moderate, and severe cases and critical cases. What does this mean?
There are, as yet, no clear guides for patients to tell them what doctors mean by mild, moderate, or severe COVID-19. Some guidance on classifying illness is appearing in research papers and epidemiological reports, but it’s not very specific. For example, the broad definition of moderate disease seems to be that it’s worse than the mild disease but not severe.
How have people been ‘classifying’ COVID-19?
You will have heard in public health announcements and in the media that some people have had mild COVID-19 infections, and others moderate, severe, or critical.
Yet, when you look up the symptoms, you are told to expect a cough, a temperature, and a loss of (or change to) your sense of smell and/or taste. How bad a cough is a mild case? How much of a temperature is severe?
These classifications are consistent with published descriptions so far. If formal, agreed to guidance on what we call mild, moderate, and severe cases are published, these may differ slightly. For now, this seems to fit the way the terms are being used.
Each of these ‘levels’ of illness is considerably less common than the previous one (so severe is less common than moderate, which is less common than mild, and so on).
Who gets what?
Most people who are young and healthy are likely to be in group one or two (asymptomatic or mild). However, some young healthy people have become very unwell and some have died. In percentage terms, this appears to be very low, but the chance is not zero.
How bad is my COVID-19?
Asymptomatic COVID-19
The government guidelines suggest that 1 in 3 people who have COVID-19 have no symptoms. It seems that this occurs more often in the healthiest and the younger age groups, including most children.
Antibody testing helps us to understand how many people have had coronavirus unknowingly, with or without symptoms. At the moment, whether you can book antibody testing depends on your job and where you live. In most situations, it is not available on the NHS.
Being asymptomatic means that you have no symptoms. If you live in a house with people with a COVID-19 infection and you have no symptoms, you may be an asymptomatic case. However, recent research suggests that the proportion of people who remain completely asymptomatic is lower than first thought, at about 1 in 5 people.
And while people with the asymptomatic infection are less likely than those with symptoms to spread the disease, the risk is by no means non-existent. This is why self-isolating for the whole 10-day period from your last contact with someone with a known infection is so important.
Remember, this entire pandemic probably started with one case. Don’t be a spreader.
Mild COVID-19
The virus affects mainly your upper respiratory tract, primarily the large airways. Key symptoms are temperature, a new, continuous cough, and/or a loss of your sense of smell or taste.
Patients with the mild illness have flu-like symptoms. These may include a dry cough and mild fever, but the fever may not reach 37.8°C, and there may sometimes be little or even no cough. Patients might notice a feeling of being a bit more breathless than normal on exercise, but they are not out of breath on normal household activity.