SALT LAKE CITY — After Meghan Markle sent shock waves across the globe Sunday night as she revealed her struggles with suicide ideation, mental health experts in Utah say her story could reduce stigma to an issue faced by so many. As she joined the British royal family, tabloids began targeting Markle — the former actress from the U.S. who married Prince Harry — with racist, sexist headlines. The media attacks hurt her friends and family and sent her into depression, she recalled. Markle said she felt the hateful articles would end if she no longer existed. "I knew if I didn't say it, that I would do it. I just didn't want to be alive anymore. And that was a very clear and real and frightening, constant thought," Markle told Oprah Winfrey during the bombshell interview on CBS.