Vitamin D Deficiency: Why 40 Percent of Singaporeans Are Running on Empty
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Here is a number that should concern you: roughly 1 billion people worldwide are vitamin D deficient. That is not a typo. One billion. And most of them have no idea.
If you live in Southeast Asia, you might assume you are safe. After all, Singapore and Malaysia sit almost on the equator. Sunshine is not exactly scarce. But the data tells a different story, and it is one that most people never hear until something goes wrong.
In this article
- Why you are probably deficient (even in a tropical country)
- The symptoms most people miss
- Vitamin D3 vs D2: the forms that actually matter
- How much you actually need (and why the guidelines are outdated)
- The vitamin K2 connection most doctors ignore
- How to test and what your numbers actually mean
- Can you get enough from food alone?
- When to take it, how to absorb it, what to avoid
Why you are probably deficient (even in a tropical country)
This is the part that surprises everyone. Singapore gets an average of 12 hours of daylight year round. Malaysia has some of the highest UV indexes on the planet. So why are deficiency rates so high?
Three reasons. And they compound on each other.
1. We spend 90% of our time indoors. Office buildings, shopping malls, MRT stations, air conditioned apartments. UVB rays (the specific wavelength that triggers vitamin D synthesis in your skin) cannot penetrate glass. So your commute, your office, your lunch at the hawker centre under a covered roof? None of it counts.
2. Sunscreen blocks vitamin D production. SPF 30 reduces your skin's ability to produce vitamin D by about 95%. This is not an argument against sunscreen. It is an argument for supplementation. You should protect your skin. But you need to replace what that protection takes away.
3. Darker skin tones require more sun exposure. Melanin is a natural sunscreen. People with darker skin (common across Southeast Asia) need 3 to 5 times more sun exposure to produce the same amount of vitamin D as someone with lighter skin. A quick 10 minute walk is not going to cut it.
A 2019 study published in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology found that 40.4% of adults in Singapore had serum 25(OH)D levels below 20 ng/mL (the threshold for deficiency). Among those who worked primarily indoors, the number jumped to 62%. In Malaysia, a 2020 survey of 1,032 women found that 87.3% had vitamin D levels below the optimal range of 30 ng/mL.
The symptoms most people miss
Vitamin D deficiency does not announce itself with a dramatic collapse. It creeps in. Slowly. And because the symptoms overlap with so many other things (stress, poor sleep, aging, "just being busy"), most people explain them away for years.
Could you be vitamin D deficient?
Check the symptoms that apply to you:
Vitamin D3 vs D2: the forms that actually matter
Not all vitamin D is the same. There are two main forms you will see on supplement labels, and the difference between them is significant.
Vitamin D3 (cholecalciferol) is the form your skin produces naturally when exposed to sunlight. It is also found in animal sources like fatty fish, egg yolks, and beef liver. D3 is what your body is designed to use.
Vitamin D2 (ergocalciferol) comes from plant sources like mushrooms exposed to UV light. It was the original form used in fortified foods and prescriptions. It still works, but not as well.
A 2012 meta-analysis published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition compared the two forms head to head. Vitamin D3 was approximately 87% more potent at raising serum 25(OH)D concentrations than D2, and produced a 2 to 3 fold greater storage of vitamin D in the body. The researchers concluded that D3 should be the preferred form for supplementation.
Bottom line: always choose D3. It is better absorbed, better stored, and better utilized by your body. This is not a debate in the scientific community anymore. D3 wins.
| Feature | Vitamin D3 | Vitamin D2 |
|---|---|---|
| Source | Sunlight, animal sources | UV-exposed mushrooms, plants |
| Bioavailability | High | Moderate |
| Half-life in blood | ~2 weeks | ~1 week |
| Effectiveness at raising levels | 87% more potent | Baseline |
| Storage in body | 2 to 3x greater | Lower |
| Cost | Slightly higher | Slightly lower |
| Suitable for vegans? | Usually no (lichen-derived D3 is vegan) | Yes |
How much you actually need (and why the guidelines are outdated)
Here is where things get interesting. The official recommended daily intake for vitamin D varies by country, and most experts now believe the numbers are too low.
Official RDA
600 IU per day for adults under 70. Set to prevent bone disease. Not optimized for immune function, mood, or muscle recovery.
Endocrine Society
1,000 to 2,000 IU daily for adults. Higher than the RDA. Based on newer evidence linking vitamin D to immune and metabolic health.
Optimal range
Most functional medicine practitioners aim for serum levels of 40 to 60 ng/mL. Achieving this typically requires 2,000 to 4,000 IU daily, depending on baseline levels.
The disconnect exists because the RDA was designed to prevent rickets, a severe bone disease. It was never designed to optimize immune function, hormone production, cardiovascular health, or mood. And the science has moved on significantly since those guidelines were set.
For most adults in Singapore and Malaysia who spend the majority of their time indoors, 1,000 to 2,000 IU of vitamin D3 per day is a solid baseline. If you have tested below 20 ng/mL, your doctor may recommend a loading dose of 5,000 IU for 8 to 12 weeks before dropping to a maintenance level.
The vitamin K2 connection most doctors ignore
This is possibly the most underrated topic in the entire supplement space. When you take vitamin D, your body absorbs more calcium from your diet. That is one of its main jobs. But here is the problem: that extra calcium needs to go somewhere.
Without vitamin K2, calcium can end up in the wrong places. Your arteries. Your kidneys. Your joints. This is called vascular calcification, and it is a real risk of long term vitamin D supplementation without K2.
Vitamin K2 (specifically the MK-7 form) activates two critical proteins:
- Osteocalcin pulls calcium into your bones and teeth where it belongs
- Matrix GLA protein (MGP) prevents calcium from depositing in your arteries and soft tissues
Think of it this way: vitamin D is the doorman who lets calcium into the building. Vitamin K2 is the guide who makes sure it goes to the right room.
The Rotterdam Study followed 4,807 participants over 7 years and found that those with the highest vitamin K2 intake had a 57% lower risk of dying from heart disease. A separate 2015 study in Thrombosis and Haemostasis found that MK-7 supplementation at 180mcg per day significantly improved arterial flexibility over a 3-year period.
This is why the best vitamin D supplements pair D3 with K2. Taking them separately is fine. But taking them together ensures the calcium your body absorbs actually ends up strengthening your bones instead of hardening your arteries.
Complete the Vitamin D Trio
Research shows magnesium is essential for activating vitamin D in your body. Without enough magnesium, vitamin D just sits there. Herb Terra's Magnesium Glycinate 500mg uses the highly absorbable glycinate form, rated 4.9 stars across 1,900+ verified reviews. Third party tested. No fillers. No proprietary blends.
Shop Magnesium GlycinateHow to test and what your numbers actually mean
The test you want is called 25-hydroxyvitamin D, sometimes written as 25(OH)D. This is the standard blood marker that measures your circulating vitamin D levels. You can request it from any GP in Singapore or Malaysia. It is also available through private labs like Pathology Asia and Quest Diagnostics.
What your results mean:
| Level (ng/mL) | Status | What to do |
|---|---|---|
| Below 12 | Severe deficiency | See a doctor. You likely need a prescription dose (50,000 IU weekly) to catch up. |
| 12 to 20 | Deficient | Supplement 4,000 to 5,000 IU daily for 8 to 12 weeks, then retest. |
| 20 to 30 | Insufficient | Supplement 2,000 to 3,000 IU daily. This is where most Singaporeans land. |
| 30 to 50 | Adequate | Maintain with 1,000 to 2,000 IU daily. |
| 40 to 60 | Optimal | This is the sweet spot. Maintain your current protocol. |
| Above 100 | Too high | Reduce supplementation. Toxicity risk (rare but real). Consult your doctor. |
Test every 3 to 6 months when you first start supplementing. Once your levels stabilize in the 40 to 60 ng/mL range, once a year is usually enough.
Can you get enough from food alone?
Honestly? Almost nobody does. Here is why.
To hit 2,000 IU from food alone, you would need to eat roughly 3.5 servings of wild caught salmon every single day. Or 45 egg yolks. Nobody is doing that.
Food should be your foundation. But for vitamin D specifically, supplementation is not optional for most people. It is the only reliable way to maintain optimal levels year round, especially if you live and work indoors.
When to take it, how to absorb it, what to avoid
Vitamin D is fat soluble. This matters more than most people realize.
Take it with a meal that contains fat. A 2015 study in the Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics found that taking vitamin D with a fat-containing meal increased absorption by 32% compared to taking it on an empty stomach. Your avocado toast, your eggs, your handful of nuts: any of these work.
Morning or afternoon is ideal. There is some evidence (still preliminary) that taking vitamin D late at night may interfere with melatonin production. Not conclusive, but easy to avoid. Just take it with breakfast or lunch.
Do not take it with calcium supplements at the same time as iron or zinc. These minerals compete for absorption. Space them at least 2 hours apart.
Best combo
Vitamin D3 + K2 + magnesium. This trio works synergistically. Magnesium helps activate vitamin D in the body.
Best time
With breakfast or lunch. Alongside a meal that includes healthy fats for maximum absorption.
Avoid
Taking on an empty stomach. Taking late at night. Combining with high dose calcium without K2.
The bottom line
Vitamin D deficiency is one of the most common, most overlooked, and most fixable health problems in the world. If you live in Singapore or Malaysia and spend most of your day indoors, there is a very real chance your levels are below where they should be.
The fix is simple. Test your levels. Supplement with vitamin D3 (paired with K2 for safety and effectiveness). Take it with food. Retest in 3 months.
It is not glamorous. It will not trend on TikTok. But it might be the single most impactful thing you can do for your energy, immunity, mood, and long term bone health this year.
Start with the basics done right
Every Herb Terra supplement is third party lab tested with full ingredient transparency. No proprietary blends. No fillers. Just the ingredients listed on the label, at the doses that research supports.
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