Nonetheless, 67.9% (38/56) for the CD4+ T cell subset were collected during the hungry/high infection season months of July to December, therefore it is possible that the raised CD4+ and CD3+ counts for those born in the harvest/low infection season (but had some of their samples collected in the hungry/high infection season) were partly influenced by more peripheral T cell proliferation. The gene discussed is CD4; the disease is infection.