
Fall 2020 bioengineering graduate Megan Lohner says taking a job at Kalamazoo-based Pfizer was 鈥渁 little bit of a 180鈥 compared to her vision for her first post-college job. She had studied some biochemistry here at 51视频-Dearborn, but biomechanics and sports injuries were her primary passions. Lohner, who was a student-athlete, even did research in that area under Professor Amanda Esquivel. But as with many of us, the pandemic changed her calculations about what seemed most important. 鈥淔or me, it鈥檚 always been about science and helping people,鈥 Lohner says. 鈥淪o when I saw this job at Pfizer, the idea of coming back to Kalamazoo, my hometown, and working on the vaccine that was going to help get us out of this just felt like the right thing to do.鈥
Since January, Lohner has been directly involved with the most groundbreaking part of Pfizer鈥檚 vaccine: It鈥檚 part of her job to dilute the concentrated mRNA to the proper levels before large batches of the vaccine are dispatched into tiny, life-saving vials. On the day to day, the feeling that they鈥檙e doing something 鈥渋mportant for the country鈥 is palpable at Pfizer. President Biden even visited recently to cheer them on, as has Governor Whitmer.