The Columbus Dispatch

An extended reach Expert in MS offers patients greater access via videos

- By Ken Gordon The Columbus Dispatch

At age 12, Aaron Boster walked into his grandmothe­r’s kitchen to find both her and his mother weeping.

Boster’s uncle was having problems stemming from his multiple sclerosis, a disease of the central nervous system that can cause a wide range of symptoms. But his mom and sister couldn't reach his doctor.

“They didn’t know what Boster is on his third camera since he started filming the videos in 2017.

to do,” recalled Boster, now 43. “And I looked at my mom and said, ‘Mom, I’m going to learn to do it better.’ Nobody should make my family feel that way. They were scared and alone, and that shouldn’t happen.”

The incident set the course for Boster’s life, specifical­ly his career in medicine.

More than 30 years later, he sat at his living-room table in Clintonvil­le on a recent weeknight, pressed a button on his camera and began recording.

Speaking clearly and gesturing animatedly, he looked and acted like a seasoned broadcaste­r as he filmed a nine-minute video, “4 Things Every Person With MS Should Be Doing.”

In the past two years, Boster has produced more than 200 such videos for his Youtube channel. And, as medical chief of neuroimmun­ology for the Ohiohealth medical system — meaning he oversees MS care in 12 hospitals — he can reach a lot of people.

Boster has more than 6,000 Youtube subscriber­s, and almost all of his videos — in November and December alone, he posted 29 total — have more than 1,000 views each, with several exceeding 10,000 each.

Round-the-clock accessibil­ity is his answer to his family’s long-ago frustratio­n.

“I realized that if I see you (a patient) four times a year, that means that 361 days a year you still have MS and you’re nowhere near me,” he said. “So if I’m going to

help you be the most awesome version of you possible despite having MS, I can’t only provide education four times a year.

“There has to be a mechanism where I can reach and help you beyond that.”

Carol Boster Kotler said she wasn’t surprised when her son went into medicine, recalling him as “an extremely inquisitiv­e kid” with a passion for science.

She and her ex-husband, Chuck Boster, raised Aaron and their daughter, Julie, in Gahanna. They lived close to Carol’s parents, Irv and Irene Levey, who were caregivers for their son, Mark.

Boster graduated from Oberlin College and the University of Cincinnati Medical School. After several internship­s and residencie­s in Michigan, he returned to Ohio in 2008, working at Ohio State University’s Wexner Medical Center until joining Ohiohealth in 2014.

His patients say he’s personable and informal. On a recent day in his office at Riverside Methodist Hospital, he wore a gray suit with black snakeskin boots, which, he said, he wears daily.

“You can always hear him coming (because of the boots),” said Jessica Proper, 38, a Dublin resident and one of Boster’s patients. “He’s a real person, and he takes the time to listen to you. His bedside manner is, by far, the best I’ve ever encountere­d with a doctor.”

Boster’s informalit­y makes his videos entertaini­ng, Proper and other patients say. In one recent installmen­t, the physician wore a Viking hat and a fake mustache. And the chickens his family raises have made cameo appearance­s in some videos.

“He did a live chat on New Year’s Day, and he was drinking a beer, and we had to try to guess what kind of beer he was drinking,” said patient Stephanie Covitz, 34, a Blacklick resident. “MS is a very daunting thing, and he’s so funny, it makes it much less scary.” The topics vary widely. Boster said he makes a point to address sensitive topics that patients might not feel comfortabl­e bringing up in appointmen­ts, such as how MS can affect a patient’s bowels, bladder and sex life.

Since he began making the videos in 2017, he has been through two cameras and is now using a third in a effort to improve their quality. He films the videos on his own time and spends time at home researchin­g how to improve them, focusing on aspects such as lighting.

He couldn’t do the videos, he said, without the understand­ing of his wife, Krissy, and their children, Max and Betty Mae.

“I’ve been trying to convince him to do Youtube for years,” Krissy said. “MS is his life, and part of the reason I love him is because he’s passionate and wants to be there for his patients in any way possible.”

The couple both said that, at times, his long hours at Riverside’s Neuroscien­ce Center MS clinic and his social-media efforts at night can become a bit much.

But his schedule is eased by the fact that he needs only two or three hours of sleep a night, his wife said.

“The guy is a madman and runs on coffee.”

Aaron Boster said helping people is his sole goal — one he set decades ago.

“My uncle passed away (at age 61 in 2013) and my grandparen­ts who were his caregivers have passed away,” he said. “I can’t help them, but I honor them when I do what I do.”

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 ?? [KYLE ROBERTSON/DISPATCH] ?? Aaron Boster sets up his camera to make a video for his Youtube channel, which has 6,000 subscriber­s.
[KYLE ROBERTSON/DISPATCH] Aaron Boster sets up his camera to make a video for his Youtube channel, which has 6,000 subscriber­s.

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