Chase Ledin
Lecturer in Social Science and Medicine

- Usher Institute
- College of Medicine and Veterinary Medicine
Contact details
Address
- Street
-
Usher Building
5-7 Little France Road
Edinburgh BioQuarter - Gate 3 - City
- Edinburgh
- Post code
- EH16 4UX
Background
Chase is a Lecturer in Social Science and Medicine at Usher Institute. Chase holds a PhD from The University of Edinburgh.
Qualifications
PhD, MA, BA (Hons)
Responsibilities & affiliations
- BeSST (Behavioural and Social Science Teaching in Medicine) Committee Member
Undergraduate teaching
Chase teaches social and ethical aspects of medicine (Y1-2) as part of the MBChB programme in Edinburgh Medical School. He is also course organiser for the module "Foundations of Knowledge" as part of the Bioethics, Law and Social Science intercalated degree.
Postgraduate teaching
Chase teaches principles and methods of qualitative health research as part of the Masters of Public Health (MPH) programme within Usher Institute.
Open to PhD supervision enquiries?
Yes
Areas of interest for supervision
My research interests focus on three core areas: (1) queer experiences of health and illness, including health activism, HIV/STI prevention, and the sociology of sexual health and medicine; (2) the intersection(s) of sexual health and science and technology studies (STS); and (3) the relationship(s) between antimicrobial resistance (AMR), antimicrobial stewarship, and sexual health and medicine. I welcome PhD projects related to these topics.
My methodological approaches are primarily qualitative, including interviews and focus groups, workshops, archival research, and arts-based and creative methods for engaging publics.
Research summary
Chase is a sociologist and historian of public health and medicine. His research explores biomedical innovation and disease elimination, HIV/STI prevention and sexual health, critical public health, and health promotion.
Using qualitative methods, including interviews, focus groups, and archival research, Chase's work examines the role of social imaginaries in public health campaigns, national and global agendas to 'end HIV' by 2030, and biomedical innovation within queer communities in the Global North. Chase also employs collaborative and participatory methods, including community workshops, to foster dialogue between academic research, public health outreach, and community engagement.
Chase is a co-editor (with Simon Lock and Benjamin Weil) of a volume titled Queering STS: Theories, Methods, and Practices. He has work published or forthcoming in Culture, Health and Sexuality; the Journal of Science Communication; Sociology of Health and Illness; and BMJ Medical Humanities.