I have noticed that females tend to report mental health issues at higher rates than men, while men seem to act on these issues more than women. In particular, it's been shown that women report having suicidal thoughts at higher frequencies than men, but men vastly outnumber women in actual suicide deaths. I'm not sure why this discrepancy exists. One explanation might be that women are on average higher in the trait neuroticism, which corresponds to increased presence of negative emotions. This could cause them to have a more extreme sensitivity to stressful circumstances on a short-term basis, while remaining relatively stable long-term, resulting in their rates of claiming mental illness being disproportionately higher than their rates of actual negative mental health.