Make Clinical tutorial videos with ngram

See how healthcare educators turn clinical skills into instructional video — each with a copy-paste prompt. Swap the brackets for your topic and generate.

ngram.com/app/editor
Copy-and-go promptshealthcareclinical tutorial30scgi

Trusted by teams at

Salesforce
Salesforce
HubSpot
HubSpot
PayPal
PayPal
Snap Inc.
Snap Inc.
Rocket Mortgage
Rocket Mortgage
Tektronix
Tektronix
Diligent
Diligent
Times Internet
Times Internet
Fivetran
Fivetran
Demandbase
Demandbase
Salesforce
Salesforce
HubSpot
HubSpot
PayPal
PayPal
Snap Inc.
Snap Inc.
Rocket Mortgage
Rocket Mortgage
Tektronix
Tektronix
Diligent
Diligent
Times Internet
Times Internet
Fivetran
Fivetran
Demandbase
Demandbase
Eightfold AI
Eightfold AI
PingCAP
PingCAP
Quizizz
Quizizz
Apryse
Apryse
Sandbox VR
Sandbox VR
Improvado
Improvado
Taggbox
Taggbox
Matrixport
Matrixport
Glasswall
Glasswall
ContractSafe
ContractSafe
Eightfold AI
Eightfold AI
PingCAP
PingCAP
Quizizz
Quizizz
Apryse
Apryse
Sandbox VR
Sandbox VR
Improvado
Improvado
Taggbox
Taggbox
Matrixport
Matrixport
Glasswall
Glasswall
ContractSafe
ContractSafe
The short version

What a healthcare tutorial video is

A healthcare tutorial video is a short instructional clip — most often 15 to 30 seconds, though compliance and therapy modules can run longer — that teaches one clinical skill, corrects one common error, or walks a professional through one regulatory requirement. Physiotherapists, occupational therapists, nursing educators, and medical SaaS teams make them for patient education, staff training, and continuing-education compliance. The examples below are real, normalized prompts people used in ngram to make these videos. Copy one, swap the bracketed details, and generate.

30s

Typical length

One skill

Per video

3D / CGI

Most-used style

Prompt gallery

Prompts to start from

Copy one, swap the bracketed parts for your clinical topic, and generate.

Cane-Use Technique for PT Patients

Featured

30s 3D animation showing correct cane technique for physical therapy patients.

screen-recording30scgi
prompt

30-second 3D animated educational video explaining correct cane use technique for physical therapy patients. Show a physiotherapy setting with a 3D character, narrate each step of the correct technique, and include on-screen labels for key posture points. Tone: clear and clinical.

Correct vs. Incorrect Cane Use (Physio)

Side-by-side 3D animation contrasting wrong and right cane-walking technique.

screen-recording30scgi
prompt

30s animated tutorial on correct cane use for walking. Use a 3D character in a physiotherapy setting. First, show the common mistake — elbow too bent, cane on the wrong side. Then show the correct technique. Keep narration concise. End with a still frame of the correct posture.

Quick Cane Correction Clip

Ultra-short scripted clip correcting a single physiotherapy error.

screen-recording15srealistic
prompt

15s educational video correcting incorrect cane use in physiotherapy. Scripted narration walks the viewer through the single most common error and the fix. Realistic style. Captions required. No music.

Conflict-of-Interest Compliance for OTs

Story-driven motion-graphics video covering COTO conflict-of-interest rules for occupational therapists.

screen-recording2min+motion-graphics
prompt

3-minute educational video on conflict-of-interest standards for occupational therapists, referencing COTO regulatory guidelines. Use a detective narrative format: the therapist spots a potential conflict, investigates the rules, and resolves it correctly. Motion-graphics style. Tone: engaging but professional.

Clinical Desire-Types Training (Marital Therapy)

Long-form 3D animated module on sexual desire typology for faith-aligned therapists.

url2min+cgi
prompt

4-6 min 3D animated clinical training video on types of sexual desire for faith-informed marital therapy. Cover responsive, spontaneous, and contextual desire models. Reference provided URL for source material. Tone: clinical, respectful, non-sensational. Suitable for continuing-education contexts.

Medical SaaS Onboarding Walkthrough

Short product tutorial guiding prescription-SaaS users through account setup.

url30sproduct onboarding
prompt

Tutorial video for medical-prescription SaaS subscribers on how to set up an account. Focus on the two steps that trip up new users: verifying prescriber credentials and setting up a formulary. Keep it under 30 seconds. Tone: friendly and direct. Show the real product UI.

Patterns across healthcare tutorial prompts

What prompts in this cluster tend to have in common.

Most-requested length30 seconds
Prompts that provide a script or recording~83%
Top visual style3D / CGI animation
Most common authorEducators
Briefs that attach a URL or recording~33%
Anatomy

Anatomy of a standout

Cane-Use Technique for PT Patients
prompt

30-second 3D animated educational video explaining correct cane use technique for physical therapy patients. Show a physiotherapy setting with a 3D character, narrate each step of the correct technique, and include on-screen labels for key posture points. Tone: clear and clinical.

01

Inputs

No video or URL needed — the educator describes the technique directly in the prompt. The 3D animation style removes the dependency on a recording of a real patient.

02

Structure

Clinical problem (incorrect use) → technique breakdown (step-by-step narration + labels) → correct posture still. Linear, matching how PT instruction actually works.

03

Tone

"Clear and clinical" keeps the video suitable for patient education without being condescending. The labels do the teaching; the narration does the reassurance.

04

Guardrail

The 3D character sidesteps the need to film a patient — preserving privacy while keeping the instruction concrete and visual.

Why it works

It teaches exactly one skill over one patient scenario with no invented data and no privacy risk. The physiotherapy setting grounds the animation, the on-screen labels do the work the narration can't, and 30 seconds is short enough to replay at the bedside.

Playbook

What makes a good healthcare tutorial video

Teach one skill per clip

Thirty seconds is enough for one technique, one correction, or one step in a process. Trying to cover more dilutes both the instruction and the viewer's retention.

Show the mistake before the fix

Contrast works. Opening on the wrong technique gives viewers a reference point that makes the correct one stick. Most strong prompts in this cluster use this before-and-after structure.

Use 3D or motion-graphics for clinical scenarios

When filming a real patient isn't appropriate, 3D animation removes the privacy constraint without sacrificing visual clarity. Over half of these prompts default to CGI for this reason.

Provide a script or narration direction

Over 83% of prompts in this cluster attach source material or describe the narration directly. A prompt with no script direction gets generic audio; one with specific medical phrasing gets clinical-grade narration.

Name the regulatory standard explicitly

Compliance videos need the rule cited in the prompt, not just described. "COTO conflict-of-interest standards" is more useful than "professional ethics guidelines" — the former drives specific, accurate content.

Keep onboarding tutorials to one friction point

Medical SaaS onboarding clips work best when they address the single step where users drop off. Longer walkthroughs lose the viewer before they reach the problem the tutorial was made to fix.

How it works

Make your own

1

Pick a shape

Choose the example closest to your brief: technique animation, compliance narrative, side-by-side correction, or product onboarding walkthrough.

30s

2

Copy the prompt

Swap the bracketed details for your clinical topic, patient population, or regulatory framework. Attach a script, URL, or recording if you have one.

1 min

3

Generate

ngram drafts the video. Adjust narration, pacing, and visual style in the editor before you share with patients or staff.

5 min

Healthcare tutorial video FAQs

Still curious?

Make your own healthcare tutorial video in minutes.

Describe the clinical skill or compliance topic, attach a script or recording if you have one, and let ngram draft the video. Edit before you share with patients or staff.