Sign up now
Australia Shopping Network. It's All About Shopping!
Categories

Posted: 2017-05-02 22:30:58

Updated May 03, 2017 11:17:55

A tearful Jimmy Kimmel turned his show's monologue into an emotional recounting of his newborn son's open-heart surgery and a plea that all American families get the life-saving medical care they need.

The host of Jimmy Kimmel Live earned an outpouring of support on social media for the monologue, including praise from former United States president Barack Obama.

Kimmel told the studio audience how his son's routine birth suddenly turned frightening.

"It was a scary story and before I go into it, I want you to know it has a happy ending," he said.

Several hours after his wife, Molly, gave birth to William John, a "very attentive" nurse at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center alerted the couple and doctors to the baby's purple-ish colour and an apparent heart murmur, the host said.

The baby's lack of oxygen was either due to a lung problem or heart disease, Kimmel said, and it was found to be his heart.

"It's a very terrifying thing," he said.

He was surrounded at the hospital by very worried-looking people, "kind of like right now," he told the audience, one of the jokes he managed despite choking up and having to pause at times.

A test showed his son had a birth defect called tetralogy of Fallot with pulmonary atresia — a hole in the wall separating the right and left sides of the heart — and a blocked pulmonary valve, Kimmel said.

The baby, nicknamed Billy, was taken by ambulance to Children's Hospital of Los Angeles to undergo surgery to open the valve.

"The longest three hours of my life," Kimmel said.

Billy will have another open-heart surgery within six months to repair the hole and then a third procedure when he's a young teen, but he came home six days after the surgery and is "doing great," Kimmel said.

He shared photos of him with his wife, their 2-year-old daughter Jane and a smiling Billy.

Kimmel thanked nurses, doctors and staff at the two hospitals by name, along with his colleagues and friends.

"Even that (expletive) Matt Damon sent flowers," Kimmel said of his faux rival.

He criticised President Donald Trump's proposed cuts to the National Institutes of Health and praised Congress for instead calling for increased funding.

"If your baby is going to die and it doesn't have to, it shouldn't matter how much money you make … whether you're a Republican or a Democrat or something else, we all agree on that, right?" he said.

Washington politicians meeting on health care need to "understand that very clearly," he said.

Former Mr Obama also weighed in with a tweet saying cases like Billy's were why his administration fought for the Affordable Care Act.

Partisan squabbles shouldn't divide America on something "every decent person wants. We need to take care of each other", Kimmel said.

He said he would skip the rest of this week's shows to be with his family while guest hosts take his place.

AP

Topics: arts-and-entertainment, donald-trump, world-politics, united-states

First posted May 03, 2017 08:30:58

View More
  • 0 Comment(s)
Captcha Challenge
Reload Image
Type in the verification code above