There are many potential factors that could explain the relatively low reported prevalence of mental disorders among suicide decedents in China compared to rates reported in high-income countries. Although the prevalence of substance use problems has recently increased, it still remains much lower in China than in high-income countries, particularly among women (
+5). Psychological autopsy studies in China have not considered the full range of personality disorders—primarily because of doubts about the validity of the DSM-IV personality disorders in China. A study of 505 suicides in China showed that impulsive personality
traits are an important risk factor for suicide (
+6), but the impulsive individuals among these suicide decedents did not have the serious psychosocial dysfunction that is required to diagnose a personality disorder. Another potential factor is the dichotomous nature of psychiatric diagnoses; the risk of suicide in China is linearly related to the severity of depressive symptoms (
+7), so many individuals without a diagnosis are still at substantial risk of suicide as a result of subsyndromal symptoms. This may be a more important factor in China and other cultures where the manifestation of dysphoric affect may not neatly match diagnostic criteria that were established using Western samples. And, finally, the frequent use of pesticides as a method of self-harm—used in 58% of suicides and 28% of suicide attempts in China (
+8)—increases the overlap between nonfatal and fatal suicidal behavior and thus could increase the proportion of suicide decedents without mental illnesses who carried out impulsive acts with little intention to die (
+6).