You point to a very critical issue in the sense that at least in the military, where they keep very close tabs on the number of suicides that occur and the causes of suicide, half of the people who end up committing suicide have already been in some kind of care. The other half have not yet sought solutions.
Getting into care is not a guarantee that you've been rescued. The first step for those who have not even sought help is to get through that door, and maybe they will be helped. That's one aspect of it.
It boils down to what I was saying before: just because you alleviate stigma and get people to say that they need help, it doesn't mean that they will get the kind of help that we want, mainly because we do not always have the solutions that they're looking for. In some cases, yes, but in many cases, no. I think that's what's burdensome.
Regardless, I think it's very important from many different perspectives to remove the stigma so that it gives them the ability to at least speak about their problems and not to be hiding behind some kind of a wall.