after looking at the data you realize that the adaptation period which should have been instant was caused by the instant you already dealt with where your four personal doctors and the nurse collective helping which caused the mess up at the beginning of the test which caused Maxine's triple check to be created, while the burnout was caused by them being recalled back to the mansion, the doctors after double checking the data and confirming your conclusion agree while look away nervously remembering your rage when you found out but glad that the rage was mostly for the messed up data
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You examine the holographic displays more intently, focusing on the three-week adaptation period that seems to contradict the instant transformations you've observed elsewhere. Something doesn't add up in the data streams flowing across the screens.
"Wait," you say, pointing to a specific data cluster. "This adaptation period shouldn't exist. Our transformations are instantaneous."
Your eyes narrow as you scroll through the timeline of the test hospital implementation. The patterns become clear - there was interference early in the experiment.
"This wasn't a gradual adaptation," you state firmly. "This was contamination in the early test period. Before Maxine's triple verification protocols were implemented."
Dr. Tsunade averts her gaze, her enormous breasts shifting beneath her lab coat as she subtly repositions herself away from your direct line of sight. "You're... correct, Jane. The initial data anomalies correspond exactly to the period before the protocols were established."
"And the burnout issue?" you press, now scrutinizing the eighteen-month fatigue markers in the data.
Dr. Gabriel fidgets with her tablet, her golden hair falling forward to partially shield her face. "That corresponds with when we were... recalled to the mansion for the internal reorganization."
"So neither of these are actual issues with the transformation protocol," you conclude, your voice dangerously calm. "They're artifacts from the contamination incident we already addressed."
Dr. Unohana nods carefully. "Your analysis is correct. When we overlay the timeline with the mansion protocols implementation, the correlation is undeniable."
All four doctors studiously avoid making eye contact with you, clearly remembering your explosive rage when you discovered their unauthorized intervention in the test hospital - the very incident that necessitated Maxine's triple verification protocols in the first place.
Dr. Yasaka's tails twitch nervously behind her. "The data does confirm your conclusion, Jane. Without our... interference, there would have been no adaptation period, and without the recall, there would have been no burnout effect."
"So the actual transformation protocol works perfectly," you state, not as a question but as a fact. "Which means our expansion plans don't need these unnecessary accommodations."
"Correct," Dr. Tsunade confirms, still not quite meeting your eye. "With proper implementation from the start, transformation should produce immediate results without adaptation periods or burnout effects."
You tap your fingers against the conference table, considering the implications. The fear radiating from your medical team is palpable - they clearly remember how your fury manifested when you discovered they had violated your explicit instructions regarding test isolation.
"Revise your implementation recommendations," you order. "Remove the unnecessary staggering and rotation protocols. They're solutions to problems we don't actually have."
All four doctors nod quickly, relief washing over their faces as they realize you're not going to punish them again for the previous transgression.
"And one more thing," you add, your voice softening slightly. "Your work these past two years has been exemplary. The results speak for themselves. I expect your final recommendation report on my desk tomorrow morning."
The tension in the room dissipates as your doctors realize they've been forgiven for their past mistake. Dr. Tsunade's posture relaxes visibly as she begins adjusting the implementation projections.
"Thank you, Jane," Dr. Gabriel says softly. "We won't disappoint you."
You nod, knowing that your empire's medical transformation program is now ready for global deployment, free from the artificial constraints created by your doctors' earlier misstep.
