RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) — Using mobile health technology to monitor patients in poor urban areas could improve residents’ access to health care while also reducing health care spending, a study conducted in a Rio de Janeiro hillside “favela” slum suggested.

The study, by the New Cities Foundation, looked at the effects of bringing state-of-the-art health care diagnostic tools to sick and elderly residents of Rio’s Dona Marta favela, an underserved shantytown up a steep hill from most conventional health care services.

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