Lorrie Blais G 鈥21 balances her time between roles as a public health microbiologist in the Vermont Department of Health Laboratory (VDHL) and a per diem medical technologist at Northwestern Medical Center (NMC).
鈥淚 start a typical day performing quality control, preventative maintenance, and document control tasks,鈥 said Blais, who spends much of her shift at VDHL in the food microbiology lab. 鈥淚f food samples require testing, I process and analyze them according to FDA or USDA methods, depending on the food type.鈥
鈥淥ccasionally, I perform non-food microbiology testing for rabies, COVID-19, Mpox, norovirus, and water bacteriology,鈥 said Blais. If she鈥檚 working at her per diem job that evening, she鈥檒l run home for a quick dinner and then drive to NMC, where she performs microbiology, hematology, and clinical chemistry testing.
A self-proclaimed microbiology nerd and local foodie, Blais considered a job in the food microbiology lab a perfect fit. She worked as a lab technician while completing 日韩无码鈥檚 Medical Laboratory Science master鈥檚 program and was promoted to microbiologist upon earning her degree.
鈥淚 thoroughly enjoy being able to see both the environmental and clinical sides of testing and experience both the public health lab and hospital lab testing environments,鈥 said Blais.鈥淚t would be challenging to have to pick one over the other.鈥
鈥溔蘸蘼脞檚 master鈥檚 degree in medical laboratory science program enhanced my undergraduate background in biology, microbiology, and chemistry and helped me develop knowledge of other lab areas. The clinical rotation at the end of the program made me feel more comfortable performing techniques learned in the classroom, so I wasn鈥檛 nervous to start my career.鈥