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Power Mornings co-host Phil Aubrey shares his son’s fight with juvenile arthritis

Click to play video: 'Power 97’s Phil Aubrey shares his family’s story with juvenile arthritis'
Power 97’s Phil Aubrey shares his family’s story with juvenile arthritis
WATCH: Phil "Philly" Aubrey, co-host of Power 97's Power Mornings joined Global News Morning to talk about his family's journey with juvenile arthritis – Feb 26, 2018

WINNIPEG – Phil “Philly” Aubrey has a voice that Winnipeggers love to wake up to. As co-host of Power 97’s Power Mornings, he’s now lending his voice to the Arthritis Society to help raise awareness around juvenile rheumatoid arthritis.

“I’ll be honest, before my son was diagnosed with this, I had never heard of juvenile rheumatoid arthritis.”

Aubrey said his 7-year-old son, Jack, was diagnosed in December 2016 with systemic juvenile rheumatoid arthritis, a rare form of the joint disorder that affects a child’s entire body.

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“He came home with flu-like sysmptoms [so] we thought he had the flu,” said Aubrey.

After Jack began experiencing stiffness in his neck, the Aubreys took their son to see a doctor, but even the physician said it was a case of the flu.

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Jack’s symptoms only worsened from there. He developed a fever and began limping around the house. Subsequent visits to the Children’s Hospital only yielded the same results — Jack had the flu.

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Eventually, Jack stopped walking and wouldn’t even move from the couch. Aubrey said he and his wife had to carry their son everywhere.

“[It was an] extremely painful experience for him. He would cry whenever we tried to move him.”

Aubrey said the final straw for the family came on Christmas Day, what Aubrey would describe as the most important day of the year for Jack.

Jack, son of Phil “Philly” Aubrey of Power Morning, lives with systemic juvenile rheumatoid arthritis. Global News / submitted

That’s when the Aubreys made their fifth visit to the Children’s Hospital and finally got some clarity. Jack was diagnosed with systemic juvenile rheumatoid arthritis and stayed at the hospital for 13 days, bound to a wheelchair.

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Aubrey said it was thanks to the staff at the Children’s Hospital who were able to get Jack back on his feet.

Jack has since recovered from that experience, but his family knows that his condition is one that may present challenges again in the future.

Aubrey is scheduled to emcee the Arthritis Society’s annual Faces of Childhood Arthritis Luncheon in Winnipeg on March 9 at The Met.

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Every year, the fundraiser supports families living with childhood arthritis. This year, the money raised will go to the first annual Camp Childhood Arthritis at BB Camp in Lake of the Woods, Ont.

For more information about the fundraiser or about juvenile arthritis, visit the Arthritis Society website here.

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