Mumbai: Antara Senior Care, a fully integrated senior care ecosystem, has unveiled a new national awareness campaign titled ‘Love Means Expert Senior Care’, in association with acclaimed Bharatanatyam dancer, actor, and inclusion champion Sudha Chandran. The campaign seeks to challenge deep-rooted cultural guilt and social judgement that often prevent Indian families from choosing professionally managed care homes for their ageing parents, even when the need is evident.
Rolled out as a six-part digital film series, the campaign addresses the unspoken questions families grapple with when considering senior care—ranging from feelings of guilt to doubts about whether care homes are the right choice. Through a candid and empathetic narrative, Chandran voices these concerns and reframes the conversation, positioning expert senior care not as abandonment, but as an informed and loving decision.
“Love is everything, but sometimes love needs support,” Chandran says in the campaign’s anchor message, which forms the emotional core of each of the six films. The first film was released today across YouTube, Instagram and Facebook, with the remaining films set for a phased digital rollout.
The campaign highlights real-life situations increasingly common in urban India—children living in different cities, seniors requiring round-the-clock medical attention, post-illness recovery needs, and the emotional toll of caregiver burnout. It also brings focus to the importance of community living and dignified support beyond basic medical supervision.

Commenting on the initiative, Ishaan Khanna, CEO, Antara Assisted Care Services, said, “Care homes are a crucial pillar of India’s senior care ecosystem as longevity and chronic illnesses rise, and family structures evolve. We equate caring for ageing parents with clinical support alone – supervising dosage, diet, doctors’ appointments – often not recognising the importance of dignified support with activities of daily living. The 24×7 vigilance required can lead to caregiver burnout, leaving both the carer and senior riddled with guilt. This is where Antara Care Homes that also act as a community can play a vital role. Antara also offer medically supervised transition care bridging the care gap between hospital and home, helping reduce complications, hospital readmission rate, and equipping families with knowledge on continued care. The campaign with Sudha Chandran gives Indian families permission to seek expert help without guilt. At Antara, we’re redefining what senior care means: not institutions, but communities where clinical excellence meets vibrant living. That’s the future of ageing with dignity in India.”

Sharing the brand’s perspective, Mukesh Ghuraiya, Chief Marketing Officer, Antara Senior Care, said, “We are proud to partner with Sudha Chandran whose life story changed how India perceived ability and support – two important lenses for viewing the changing conversations around Ageing in India. This campaign reflects what we see every day at Antara—families who love their parents deeply, recognize that ageing today requires both medical expertise and social connection, but are held back by preconceived notions. This guilt sits between what ageing truly needs and what families can actually provide. Through Sudha, these films articulate how ‘Love Means Expert Care’. At Antara, we aim to normalize these discussions, and bring them out in the open. Our role is to partner with families, not replace them. When a daughter can visit her mother knowing she has 24×7 medical monitoring, nutritious meals, and friends to share her day with, that’s when love and expert care work together.”
The campaign comes at a critical time, as India’s population aged 60 and above has crossed 157 million, according to the JLL-ASLI report 2024. Rising chronic illnesses and loneliness are intensifying the need for structured senior care, yet cultural taboos often delay professional intervention until crisis situations emerge.
Through ‘Love Means Expert Senior Care’, Antara aims to normalise conversations around care homes while supporting its expansion across North and South India, including facilities in Bengaluru and Chennai, reinforcing its vision of enabling dignified, community-led ageing in India.
















