Introduction: The home is the natural setting for the development of informal care. The work
that nurses are required to develop in this context (the carer/the elderly dependent/the home)
focuses on training and educational activities to assist these two groups, such as demonstrating
care activities to help dependent seniors, instruction in self-care techniques and teaching strategies
for the use of human and material resources. Aims: This article analyzes care education
interventions performed by nurses, and the factors that facilitate, or limit, health care training.
Methodological approach: This is a qualitative, descriptive study designed to be flexible and
openly analytical in its approach to the research problem and the dynamic nature of the home
environment. Triangulation of the methodological techniques and study subjects was applied.
Results: Nursing interventions related to professional attitudes, such as encouraging communication
and facilitating teaching; communication interventions in health education and
counseling; and technical interventions aimed at improving access to health information
and support for the informal carer. Lack of will, the advanced age of the carer, emotional state
and work overload are factors that undermine care instruction, which if reversed, would become
learning facilitators. The lack of time and resources in the home are the major limiting factors
on care teaching, according to nurses. Evidence from our study suggests that care in the home is
considered a key primary health care strategy, one in which nurses play a significant role.