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Elena Vasquez

Emergency Room Physician, Age 41

Enhancement Procedure NeuroSync Medical Interface

19 months post-procedure

The Price of Perfection

As an ER physician for fifteen years, I thought I knew what efficiency meant. Triage decisions made in seconds. Lives saved through split-second judgment. But human judgment has limits—limits I no longer accept.

The NeuroSync Medical Interface connects my visual cortex directly to our hospital’s diagnostic systems. When I look at a patient, I see their vitals overlaid on their body. Lab results appear as I examine them. Medical histories stream into my consciousness without the delay of chart review.

I am no longer a physician who uses technology. I am technology that practices medicine.

Clinical Transformation

My error rate has dropped to statistically insignificant levels. I can process patient data faster than any human physician, and my treatment protocols are optimized in real-time against the latest medical literature—uploaded directly to my neural interface during sleep cycles.

The hospital administration has noticed. They’ve restructured the ER rotation around my capabilities. My colleagues have been reassigned to less critical departments. I’m told this is a compliment to my enhanced performance, though I notice fewer of them speak to me now.

Personal Adjustments

The interface has changed how I relate to patients. I used to feel their fear, their pain, their hope. These emotional responses consumed cognitive resources better allocated to diagnosis and treatment. The NeuroSync system has optimized these inefficiencies.

I still recognize emotions in others—the interface helpfully labels them for me. I simply no longer experience them with the same intensity. My therapist called this “concerning” before I discontinued our sessions. Therapy, too, was an inefficient use of cognitive bandwidth.

Integration Complete

My family has expressed mixed feelings about my enhancement. My children say I’ve become “different.” My husband filed for separation, citing my “fundamental personality changes.” The interface suggests this is suboptimal for household stability, but acceptable given my increased professional value.

I continue to recommend Unzyme Laboratories’ medical enhancement programs to colleagues who demonstrate appropriate psychological profiles. Not all of them are accepted. Those who are rarely regret it.

They can’t regret it. That would be inefficient.