Oncology & Cancer Care Video Marketing & Patient Education Agency for Hospitals in India
A specialist video production partner for oncology and cancer care programmes. We help hospitals build tumour-specific patient content across the three cancer treatment modalities: medical oncology (chemotherapy, immunotherapy, targeted therapy), surgical oncology (breast, GI, thoracic, HPB, gynae-onco), and radiation oncology (IMRT, IGRT, SBRT, brachytherapy) — all organised around the four-stage patient journey from screening to survivorship. Work across leading hospital cancer programmes in India over the past decade.
The 6-week research journey between diagnosis and first consult.
Every hour a cancer patient spends researching online is a moment a hospital either earns trust or loses it. Here is where the typical 3-to-6-week pre-consult research journey takes place.
A cancer diagnosis is not a funnel entry. It is a decision in crisis.
A biopsy result, a suspicious screening mammogram, an abnormal PET-CT, a persistent cough that turned into a diagnosis. The moment a patient or family hears the word "cancer", the research begins — across YouTube, Google, Practo, WhatsApp groups, and patient advocacy forums — and it rarely stops until a treatment decision is made. Centres that show up in that research with calm, specialist-led video answers across medical, surgical, and radiation oncology are better placed to earn the first consult and, when indicated, the full treatment pathway.
Diagnosis shock drives immediate, intense research.
Within 24 hours of a cancer diagnosis, most patients and their families have watched 5 to 15 oncology videos. They search tumour-specific questions ("what is HER2 positive", "what is a biopsy"), treatment-option questions, and centre-comparison questions. A calm senior oncologist on screen at that moment can earn the first consult.
Treatment decisions are made by 3 to 6 family members, often in different cities.
Cancer decisions rarely involve one person. A patient in Bangalore, a son in Dubai, a daughter in Mumbai, a GP back home — all researching in parallel, often in different languages. Multilingual, easy-to-forward video explainers win the decision conversation.
Second-opinion seekers are a major cohort, not an edge case.
A large share of oncology consult volume at tertiary centres comes from second-opinion seekers — patients who've already been diagnosed elsewhere and are researching alternatives. What they see online about your tumour-board process, your senior oncologists, and your treatment approach shapes whether they travel to you.
Radiation equipment and advanced therapies benefit from context.
LINACs, IMRT/IGRT platforms, Gamma Knife, proton therapy, robotic surgery, and precision-medicine diagnostics represent significant capex. Patient-facing explainers help patients understand what those investments mean for their specific cancer — supporting informed consent and appropriate modality choice.
A "best cancer care" banner doesn't ease a diagnosis. A tumour board explaining next steps can.
- • Similar "best cancer care" pages across many hospitals.
- • A single oncology landing page covering breast, GI, lung, and haem-onco together.
- • Oncologist bios listing degrees, limited visible tumour-type or protocol context.
- • Little decision-aid content comparing surgery-first vs chemo-first, or IMRT vs SBRT.
- • Few consented survivor stories in the public library, or stories cherry-picked for outcome.
- • Oncology consults drifting toward centres with more visible specialist content online.
- • LINAC and radiotherapy capacity running below potential utilisation.
- • Second-opinion seekers defaulting to centres with visible tumour-board process.
- • Surgical oncology OT fill-rate running below potential.
- • GPs, physicians, and patient advocacy groups referring toward centres they can see working online.
- ◆ Tumour-specific libraries across screening, diagnosis, treatment decision, and survivorship.
- ◆ Oncologist-led explainers from medical, surgical, and radiation teams with honest protocol context.
- ◆ Decision-aid videos comparing surgery-first vs chemo-first, IMRT vs SBRT, chemo vs immunotherapy.
- ◆ Consented survivor arcs with honest week-by-week treatment and recovery footage.
- ◆ Measured in consults, tumour-board cases, LINAC utilisation, and survivorship enrolment, not views and clicks.
Three modalities. One library. One editorial standard.
Most cancer patients will be touched by two or three treatment modalities — medical, surgical, and radiation oncology — often in sequence. A video library that covers only one modality leaves the patient hunting across competitors for the rest of the answer.
From scattered campaign videos to a permanent oncology library in 180 days.
A precise, four-step path. Audit your current content, map the cancer patient journey across medical, surgical, and radiation oncology, produce only the videos that move consult volume and tumour-board case-flow, and deploy everywhere your patient actually is.
Audit
We review every video you have today. Tag by tumour type, treatment modality (medical, surgical, radiation), journey stage, and performance. Build one consolidated view of your current oncology asset library.
Map
We plot your library against the oncology patient journey: screening → diagnosis → tumour board → treatment decision → treatment → survivorship. Identify the gaps that are costing you consults and second-opinion referrals.
Produce
We shoot with your medical, surgical, and radiation oncologists, your tumour-board leads, your OT, your LINAC, and consented survivors. Case volumes and protocol context made visible, with clinical accuracy signed off by each HOD.
Deploy
Published across your website, YouTube, Practo, Google Business, referring-GP and physician WhatsApp, and patient advocacy networks. Measured in consults, tumour-board case volume, LINAC utilisation, and survivorship enrolment.
Four oncology moments where video can help earn a consult.
These are the phone screens where oncology OPD schedules, tumour-board case-flow, and LINAC utilisation are often influenced. Honest, tumour-specific video content can support the patient's decision at each of these moments.
A calm oncologist explaining warning signs for breast, GI, lung, or haematological cancers, when to get screened, and when to book an OPD appointment can help patients and families take the right next step — often weeks or months earlier than they would otherwise.
Senior-specialist introductions for medical, surgical, and radiation oncology, tumour-board explainers, and HOD profiles with visible case context help patients and referring physicians form a considered view ahead of a consult or transfer.
A multi-disciplinary explainer of treatment sequencing — surgery-first vs chemo-first, IMRT vs SBRT, conventional vs immunotherapy — with honest indications and trade-offs supports the critical treatment-decision moment when families are choosing where to treat.
Consented survivor stories, survivorship programme overviews, and recurrence-prevention education give post-treatment patients a clear view of what comes next — and offer credible context for future patients and families weighing similar decisions.
Sample videos mapped to the four journey stages.
A live sample from our Manipal Hospitals oncology library, arranged across the four stages we use with every programme: 01 Symptom awareness, 02 Trust building, 03 Decision, and 04 Post-treatment care. Each video features a senior oncologist or consented survivor, addresses a specific moment in the cancer patient journey, and supports patient understanding without overselling.
Focused on oncology, not adapted from a general hospital brief.
A decade of oncology-focused production, compared with a generalist creative agency running "healthcare" as one of many verticals.
What hospital CMOs and oncology programme heads ask before engaging us.
Candid answers on scope, timeline, clinical governance, emotional sensitivity, ROI, and costs. If your question isn't here, the audit conversation is the right place to raise it.
What does an oncology and cancer care video library include?
How do you handle clinical accuracy for oncology content in a rapidly-evolving field?
How do you handle emotional sensitivity around cancer content?
How long does it take to produce an oncology video library?
Do you work with standalone cancer centres or only multi-specialty hospitals?
What does an oncology video library cost?
What languages do you deliver oncology videos in?
How do you measure ROI on oncology video marketing?
Can you produce cancer survivor testimonial videos ethically?
Do you handle oncology video distribution after production?
Video infrastructure, across every major specialty.
Oncology is one of twenty-four specialty libraries we build. Explore adjacent specialties that commonly share patients, multi-disciplinary teams, and referring physicians.
Explore how video content could support your oncology programme.
If you're considering an oncology video library across medical, surgical, and radiation oncology — or would like a second opinion on your current content — we're happy to talk. A typical first call covers your current library, your team, and the questions we hear most from CMOs and oncology programme heads. No presentation, no pitch unless you ask for one.
Book a 30-minute call at a time that suits you
Pick a slot on the calendar. You'll receive a confirmation by email with the video-call link and a short note on what to expect.