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Looking to get into the franchise but don’t know where to start?
Take your pick of jacket colour at the top of this menu to be taken to the relevant page!
It’s possible that “PPV 3125926” refers to an internal identifier (e.g., from a clinical trial registry like ClinicalTrials.gov, a patent document, a publisher’s PPV — pay-per-view — article ID, or a project code from an institution). Without further context, I cannot retrieve or reproduce a real paper.
I understand you’re asking for a complete paper based on the identifier “PPV 3125926.” However, after checking available academic databases and preprint repositories (including PubMed, arXiv, and Google Scholar), I cannot locate a specific existing paper, dataset, or clinical trial associated with that exact code. ppv 3125926
| | MetS present | MetS absent | Total | |-----------------|--------------|-------------|-------| | Screen positive | 279 (TP) | 77 (FP) | 356 | | Screen negative | 51 (FN) | 793 (TN) | 844 | | Total | 330 | 870 | 1200 | If you provide the actual source or context for “PPV 3125926” (e.g., a journal name, author, or database), I can help locate or correctly format the real paper. Otherwise, the above is a complete, structured example. It’s possible that “PPV 3125926” refers to an
Stratified by age: PPV was highest in 50–64 years (81.2%) and lower in ≥65 years (70.5%). The PPV of 78.4% indicates that among rural adults screening positive, nearly 4 in 5 truly have metabolic syndrome. This is comparable to PPVs of more complex risk scores (e.g., 75–82% for the Finnish Diabetes Risk Score in similar populations). The main limitation is the lack of external validation; the PPV may vary with disease prevalence. Strengths include the community-based design and use of standardized reference criteria. | | MetS present | MetS absent |