@ChrisMayLA6 @epistatacadam
Back in the mid-1960s I was fortunate/unfortunate to have been subject to the tender mercies of the NHS mental healthcare services. At age 15 I was admitted to bottom rung of NHS psychiatric care in a state of catastrophic depression. The hospital in which I was treated as an inpatient for 6 months, was Amberstone Hospital which was part of the Hellingly Hospital group of hospitals. That included Amberstone for relatively minor treatable mental/emotional illnesses, 'Park House' for middling to severe or more intractable mental illness and Hellingly 'Main Building' for long stay gravely mentally ill patients which included a number of 'locked' wards along with a secure unit. There was also a unit called 'Park Farm' which as its name suggests was a working farm and market garden. Most of the labour was provided by patients who were judged to need 'sheltered' accommodation and employment due to their relatively fragile mental/emotional state. The farm also supplied much of the hospital kitchens need for farm produce. One thing that stands out in my mind about that 6 months is how excellent the food was; that was in part due to Park Farm's fresh produce and a group of caring and competent chefs and other kitchen staff.
In keeping with modern trends, Amberstone Hospital is now office for NHS pen-pushers, Park Farm has long since been sold off and it's vulnerable workforce/residents pushed out into no-care-whatsoever in the community. Park House and Hellingly itself have also gone and been replaced by unthinkably tiny acute psychiatric units integrated into local general hospitals that are no substitute whatever for the long term care that they used to provide to the very vulnerable.
The idea was a laudable one but as it was subject to implementation by civil servants like Sir Humphrey Appleby who don't give a damn about anyone or anything other than making their minister look good to the voting public and cutting costs whilst incresing their head count of pen-pushers, it suffered from that very British malaise of monstrous under-funding!