Spanning 17 cities and 29 centers, the disruptive campaign challenged India’s deeply rooted ‘Chai-Sutta’ culture and turned a public health message into a high-impact behavioural movement.
New Delhi, [India] 3rd June, 2026: At the end of May, when most World No Tobacco Day campaigns followed the usual route of warnings and awareness posters, Cancer Healer Center took a more relatable approach. Its pan-India campaign, “Break Up with Sutta,” entered the exact cultural moment where the habit often begins — the everyday chai-sutta break.
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For many Indians, especially working professionals and young adults, chai-sutta is seen as a pause, a ritual and a social habit. Cancer Healer Center used this insight to make the anti-tobacco message feel less like medical preaching and more like a meaningful cultural nudge.
The campaign reframed tobacco as a “toxic partner” and encouraged people to break up with it. This emotional metaphor shifted the conversation away from fear and guilt, making quitting feel like a personal act of self-respect.
Cancer Healer Center activated the campaign across tea stalls and center receptions, turning everyday spaces into participation points. People could symbolically surrender cigarettes and cigarette boxes while engaging with the message in a direct and relatable way.The campaign was also amplified on Instagram, where reels, influencer participation and social media content helped extend the on-ground movement into a wider digital conversation, making the message more visible, shareable and engaging for online audiences.
Conducted across 29 Cancer Healer Center centers in 17 cities, the campaign saw over 23,000 symbolic break-ups in a single day. Smokers voluntarily surrendered over 7,250 cigarettes, deposited 5,800 cigarette boxes into drop-boxes, and more than 10,150 people participated by choosing tea without tobacco.
Speaking on the campaign, Dr. Tarang Krishna, Managing Director, Cancer Healer Center, said: “For decades, the global healthcare system has relied on fear and clinical intimidation to combat tobacco addiction, but the modern generation has become entirely immune to such warnings. As healers, we cannot simply wait in our centers for the damage to be done; we must intervene where it begins in everyday habits. ‘Break Up with Sutta’ wasn’t just an awareness drive; it was a psychological disruption. Seeing thousands of young Indians surrender their cigarettes proves that when healthcare evolves from preaching to genuine empathy, we can ignite a cultural shift. True healing begins the exact moment you decide you deserve better.”
With “Break Up with Sutta,” Cancer Healer Center showed how healthcare communication can become more participative, culturally relevant and behaviour-led. The campaign did not just ask people to quit tobacco; it gave them a moment, a metaphor and a public act to begin that journey.
The initiative, titled #BreakupWithSutta, also included public interactions, vox-pop videos, influencer-led awareness content, hyperlocal outreach, in-clinic tube-filling reels and a special content rollout around the idea of breaking up with one’s most toxic relationship — tobacco.
The awareness activity will continue through influencer content, hyperlocal coverage, public interaction reels, Dr. Tarang Krishna’s featured “Relationship Counsellor” reel and a final success film showcasing participation, impact and media response.



















