Pioneering Thai clinic offers treatment for transgenders to keep them away from the black market

Chalit Pongpitakwiset has always felt like a man. Now the 25-year-old wants everyone else to see it too.
But unlike most transgender people in Asia, who are left to self-administer hormone supplements, Chalit is being helped by a pioneering clinic.
“I am in the hands of doctors,” said Chalit, who was born female, but identifies as a man. “I’m not doing it by myself, so it isn’t dangerous,” the software company worker said.
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Several days after receiving his first testosterone injection, Chalit returned to get a blood test at Tangerine, the new clinic inside a Red Cross centre in downtown Bangkok.
The centre is a pilot programme that organisers hope could be replicated across Asia.
Its location is no accident – Thailand has a large and visible transgender population and is one of the world’s top destinations for sex-reassignment surgery.
But just like elsewhere in Asia-Pacific, a region home to more than nine million transgender people according UN estimates, long-term care for patients is patchy at best.