0 a general feeling of being ill or having no energy, or an uncomfortable feeling that something is wrong, especially with society, and that you cannot change the situation:
1 a general feeling of bad health or lack of energy in a person, group, or society:
History of axillary or elbow lymphadenopathy and malaise were present in two cases.
It believed this group both personally unhappy and a source of malaise for the rest of society.
In the second scenario, a patient is suffering from fevers, malaise, and a painful blistering rash after infection with smallpox.
Broadsheets are read by the better educated whose class, income and status may make them less prone to political malaise.
Table 7 shows that the malaise scores vary rather little and unsystematically among different groupings of media users.
Some patients may suffer from severe abdominal cramps, fever, chills, headache and myalgia, nausea and malaise.
At the same time, there is little evidence that television news induces political malaise.
At the same time, there is little evidence that newspaper reading is associated with political malaise.