MERRITT, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which KENNEDY, J., joined. DAUGHTREY, J. (pp. 229-32), delivered a separate opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part.
OPINION
MERRITT, Circuit Judge.In this wrongful death action, plaintiffs, Nancy Ellis, individually, as the mother of Craig Lanthorn, now deceased and as next friend of Catherine E. Lanthorn, and Catherine Lanthorn, individually, minor child of deceased, Craig Lanthorn, sued the defendants, Johnson City and Washington County, Tennessee, a city and the county in which it is located. Plaintiffs also sued three jailors: Sam Garland, employed by the Johnson City Jail; and R.D. Jamerson and Billy Mitchell, employed by Washington County Jail. Plaintiffs brought suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for the suicide of Craig Lanthorn while incarcerated at the Washington County Jail on August 3, 1994, three hours after being transferred there from the Johnson City Jail. The primary issue we deal with in this opinion is whether the action’s or policies of the defendants, or any of them, was the proximate cause of the suicide. We conclude as to all defendants, except Jamerson, that the plaintiffs have failed to establish proximate causation and therefore affirm the summary judgment entered below as to Washington County and Johnson City. We affirm the District Court’s grant of summary judgment on grounds of qualified immunity to jailors Garland and Mitchell. We conclude that we lack interlocutory appellate jurisdiction as to the defendant Jamerson’s claim that the District Court erred in refusing to grant him qualified immunity.
I. Washington County’s Liability for Failure to Train Its Jailors to Prevent Suicide
The case proceeded in the court below on the theory that Craig Lanthorn committed suicide in “cell block B^i” of the Washington County Jail by hanging himself at approximately 1:55 P.M. on August 3, 1994. This cell had a monitor camera at one end. It was not designed as a suicide prevention cell. Plaintiffs claim that Lanthorn should have been placed in a suicide prevention cell and that all sheets and clothing useful in committing suicide should have been removed. They also claim that the County did not give the jailors adequate training in suicide prevention.
On the afternoon of August 2, 1994, Craig Lanthorn was arrested at the residence of Dr. and Mrs. James Turnbull, following a 911 call from the Turnbull’s daughter, Sara, reporting that Lanthorn, her boyfriend, was attempting to break into the house. She left the residence and hid in a neighbor’s yard after Lanthorn broke a window to gain access through the back door. Dr. Turnbull, a psychiatrist, *227testified that Lanthorn was “delirious or delusional,” and he attributed this to “Lanthorn’s drug use,” not to suicidal tendencies or a mental illness. Arresting officer Hensley believed that Lanthorn was drunk. He was “dazed or disoriented,” “unsteady on his feet” but “cooperative.” Hensley carried Lanthorn to the Johnson City Jail and charged him with public intoxication and criminal trespass. He was held overnight in the Johnson City Jail. After he was arraigned in court the next morning, where he was represented by counsel, the Johnson City police carried him to the Washington County Jail to await trial.
During the period from 11:00 A.M. in the morning when Lanthorn arrived at the Washington County Jail until his suicide three hours later, nothing occurred that would put reasonable jailors on notice of a possible suicide attempt. Jailor Robertson talked to Lanthorn about suicide when Lanthorn arrived, and Lanthorn said that he was not a suicide risk and “loved life.” A few minutes later Jailor Mitchell, who had gone to high school with Lanthorn, came on duty. He was concerned about Lanthorn’s mental health and so advised his superior, who told him to determine if Lanthorn was a suicide possibility. Mitchell found Lanthorn on the second floor of the jail talking to his mother. He seemed to be crying. After the phone call, Mitchell engaged him in conversation. Mitchell asked Lanthorn, “Craig, are you suicidal?” Lanthorn said, “Hell no, I’ve got a baby on the way that I’ve got to take care of.”
Finally, and most important of all, plaintiff in this case, Nancy Ellis, Lanthorn’s mother, is an experienced, practicing, licensed, clinical psychologist with a Ph.D. She stated two months after the death of her son in a letter that “he was not suicidal at 11:30 when I talked to him [on the phone],” and he “knew he was getting out [of jail]”:
Craig had everything to live for, a family who adored him, a child on the way, numerous friends and, a positive future. He was immensely likable. Although he had had some painful experiences, he was dealing with this in therapy and was very enthusiastic about treatment. One of the things we talked about in our last conversation was his next session with Ted (his psychologist). He was eager to get there. (App.474.)
Based on these facts — particularly in view of his mother’s expert opinion two months later and jailor Mitchell’s conversation about suicide — there is no evidence from which a reasonable jailor would have foreseen suicide. No deliberately indifferent policy was a proximate cause of the death. When an experienced expert in the field of psychology, like decedent’s mother, plaintiff, Nancy Ellis, was unable to predict suicide, and did not think it was necessary to warn her son’s jailors of such a possibility, it is unreasonable to attribute fault to the County or its jailors for failing to predict suicide. The County was under no legal obligation to isolate Lanthorn in a suicide cell or take other extraordinary steps in anticipation of suicide. Whatever the county may have failed to do in training its jailors about suicide, its training program was not a proximate cause of the injury here. Its conduct was no more a proximate cause of the suicide than was the failure of plaintiff Ellis herself — an expert in the field — to foresee the result.
The same reasoning applies to jail- or Mitchell, the jailor who was in high school with Lanthorn. Mitchell recognized that Lanthorn was mentally unstable and interrogated him about suicide. After the interview, Mitchell made a mistake in assessing Lanthorn’s suicidal tendencies— just as did Lanthorn’s mother — but he certainly was not deliberately indifferent toward Lanthorn and exhibited a genuine concern for his welfare while in jail. The District Court did not err in granting summary judgment for Mitchell.
II. Liability of Johnson City and its Jailors for Lanthorn’s Suicide
Although Lanthorn’s suicide occurred in the Washington County Jail af*228ter his transfer, not in the Johnson City Jail, plaintiffs also seek to blame Johnson City and its jailors for the death of Lanthorn on grounds that Johnson City did not properly train its jailors in suicide prevention, which in turn led the jailors to fail to anticipate, and remain deliberately indifferent to, the possibility of Lanthorn’s suicide. For reasons similar to those expressed above, we conclude that the actions and policies of Johnson City and its jailors did not proximately cause the suicide of Craig Lanthorn. There is no evidence to support a conclusion that the City or its employees should be held legally responsible for the suicide.
During the less-than-24-hour period Lanthorn was in the Johnson City Jail, he talked to his mother, plaintiff Nancy Ellis, four times by phone. He talked to his father, Dr. Lanthorn, also a clinical psychologist. His uncle, Tom Cowan, a local lawyer, came to see him in jail. Lanthorn also talked to his grandmother. Two family friends, the Farthings, also came to see him in the jail. None of these relatives or family friends posted the $100 bond necessary to release him from jail because his mother and father both wanted him to stay in jail until he agreed to enter a drug treatment program. The record is clear on this point. Neither the mother — -the plaintiff in this ease — -nor the father, nor any of the relatives or family friends, warned the jailors that Craig Lanthorn might be suicidal, nor did they provide the jailors with any information that would put them on notice that this young man might try to take his own life. Moreover, both of the two psychiatrists who had treated Lanthorn, Dr. Fenley and Dr. Patel, testified that Lanthorn’s behavior in jail did not indicate suicide. From their testimony it is clear that they would not have predicted or anticipated suicide.
Under these circumstances — with experts in the field, (including his mother and father and the two psychiatrists who had treated him) failing to recognize or anticipate suicide — counsel’s argument for the plaintiffs that the City and its jailors should be held blameworthy for similar mistakes under federal constitutional law is wholly without merit. The City and its jailors may or may not have been properly trained in suicide prevention — we reserve judgment on that question — but that did not proximately cause the injury here. In this case the evidence in the record before us would not support a finding that the defendants should be held legally responsible in damages because they failed to anticipate and prevent Lanthorn’s suicide.
The questions discussed above are relatively easy, and reflection after a review of the record can lead to only one conclusion. Defendant Jamerson’s cross-appeal from the denial of his motion for summary judgment on qualified immunity presents a more difficult problem.
III. Jamerson’s Cross-Appeal
In Johnson v. Jones, 515 U.S. 304, 319-20, 115 S.Ct. 2151, 132 L.Ed.2d 238 (1995), Justice Breyer wrote for a unanimous court, “a defendant, entitled to invoke a qualified immunity defense, may not appeal a district court’s summary judgment order insofar as that order determines whether or not the pretrial record sets forth a ‘genuine’ issue of fact for trial.” Here, the District Court determined that there was a genuine issue of fact for trial regarding Jamerson and denied his motion for summary judgment. We have held that in order for an interlocutory appeal based on qualified immunity to lie, “the defendant must be prepared to overlook any factual dispute and to concede an interpretation of the facts in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs case.” Berryman v. Rieger, 150 F.3d 561 (6th Cir.1998).
The factual dispute here arises from plaintiffs’ claim that Jamerson saw Lant-horn tie the noose around the bar at 1:45 P.M. but did not call an emergency medical team until 1:56 P.M. Plaintiffs further contend that Jamerson did not notify other jailers of the problem until 1:55 P.M. As *229evidence that Jamerson saw Lanthorn tie the noose at 1:45, plaintiffs rely on the following hearsay statements Sheriff Ron England made to the press on the day of Lanthorn’s death:
Our sergeant Jamerson was watching the monitors and seen [sic] him when he tried to place the loop on the bars and summonsed [sic] an upstairs jailer — they went in and one inmate helped hold him up and the jailers and the inmates took the noose from around his neck.
In a separate statement, Sheriff England said:
[Lanthorn] was a Johnson City police department prisoner and ... they transported him down here at 11:00 a.m.... [H]e was booked in, placed in a cell with four other inmates, and like I said at 1:45 while watching the monitor, sergeant Jamerson seen [sic] him put the sheet around his neck which was fashioned as a rope.
On appeal, Jamerson disputes these facts which might, if true, give rise to a finding of deliberate indifference. This sort of factual dispute is precisely what the Supreme Court has instructed appellate courts to avoid on an appeal of a denial of qualified immunity, except for one thing: The statement is unreliable hearsay. It is an out-of-court declaration, offered for the truth of the matter asserted, by a declar-ant, who subsequently testified by deposition that he has no personal knowledge about the event and does not know now why he made the statement or what it was based on.
The question then comes down to this: In a qualified immunity appeal by a state official, should the court of appeals look behind a Johnson v. Jones type factual dispute to determine if the factual dispute is based only on uncorroborated hearsay that will not be admissible at trial. We would prefer to avoid these kinds of evidentiary issues when ruling on our jurisdiction to decide qualified immunity under Johnson v. Jones because the issue of qualified immunity cannot be “decided with reference only to undisputed facts,” the requirement for appellate jurisdiction set out by the Supreme Court at 515 U.S. at 313, 115 S.Ct. 2151. To decide on interlocutory appeal all of the possible fact related evidence questions present in the case would, as the Supreme Court observed, “consume inordinate amounts of appellate time” and “require a reading of a vast pretrial record” and even “greater delay” in bringing cases to a conclusion. 515 U.S. at 316, 115 S.Ct. 2151.
The court below declined to grant Jam-erson’s motion for summary judgment because, and only because, of Sheriff England’s hearsay statements. The summary judgment rule, Rule 56(e) is clear that such rulings may be based only on statements “made on personal knowledge” or statements otherwise “admissible in evidence” by a witness “competent to testify to the matters stated.” Plaintiffs argue that the Sheriffs statement is an admission. But the Sheriffs admissions are not admissible in the case against Jamerson, which is against him personally.
Thus the only factual dispute in this case arises from the rankest type of inadmissible hearsay. Based on the Sheriffs deposition, the statement to the press was unreliable and inadmissible in evidence. No exception to the hearsay rule would let it in. Nonetheless, restrained as we are by Johnson, we must dismiss Jamerson’s appeal because a factual dispute remains.
The judgment of the District Court is therefore affirmed as to all parties.