"Anti-aging" is starting to feel like yesterday's conversation. In Singapore's wellness-conscious circles, the question has quietly shifted: not how long will you live, but how well will you age?
The Global Wellness Summit's 2026 Trends report named longevity one of the defining themes of the year — but not in the way many expect. Rather than expensive treatments or dramatic interventions, the report highlights sleep quality, mindful eating, stress regulation, and daily exercise as the true architecture of a long, healthy life. The message is clear: longevity is a design problem, not a medical one.
Duke-NUS Medical School, in its research on healthy aging in Singapore, reinforces this view — that extending healthspan depends far more on the habits we build into our daily lives than on clinical interventions alone.
Yet a 2026 survey by The Wellness Insider Asia found that many health-conscious people in Singapore feel stuck: the motivation to be healthier is there, but the habits that actually stick are harder to build.
Supporting balanced blood sugar after meals is one of those quiet, repeatable habits — easy to overlook, but significant over time. KAIKO is formulated with DNJ (1-deoxynojirimycin), a naturally occurring compound derived from silkworm, rooted in Japan's centuries-old tradition of sericulture. It gently helps manage post-meal blood sugar fluctuations, fitting seamlessly into the kind of daily routine that longevity is actually built on.
Small. Consistent. Sustainable. That's what living well looks like.
References
Global Wellness Institute, 26 January 2026, https://globalwellnessinstitute.org/press-room/press-releases/global-wellness-summit-releases-10-wellness-trends-for-2026/
Duke-NUS Medical School, 2026, https://www.duke-nus.edu.sg/newshub/media-releases/scah-2026
The Wellness Insider Asia, April 2026, https://thewellnessinsider.asia/2026/04/wellness-trends-singapore-2026-why-many-people-want-to-be-healthier-but-still-feel-stuck/