I was being a little facetious with that comment, but, considering what you are seeing for results maybe not. When it comes to the shop actually doing something about it, yeah, it was a lot facetious.
The question to the answer is: what does running good really mean? If one changes ONLY the injectors with the SAME basic injector (ie. not larger nozzles) and the mpg goes down, but, the engine runs smoothly and starts good does that mean everything is fine? Unfortunately, that is going to be totally subjective to ones level of tolerance. You solved the problem with the lope, codes, maybe limp mode, but, now something else is has changed to the negative. Sucks but that is the reality of using reman injectors more often than not. They are cheaper for a reason.
If all you were having issues with were codes for 1 injector, it was a bad solenoid and likely nothing mechanical. From the mpg drop your old injectors quite likely were in better shape mechanically than the remans you have now. That really bites but it happens all the time.
A reman CR injector is really a waste of time, only use in case of emergency to get home. There is little most of these shops can do to test them, they simply don't have the expertise or equipment to do an adequate job of identifying problems. These aren't jerk pump injectors you can pop test and get a warm fuzzy all is good. CR injectors will test good 9 of 10 times and still be bad, the published specs on these things are too broad for a precision engineered component and they will fail to perform adequately when installed.
Fight these junk injectors for a while then get a GOOD set of customized CR injectors to install and the light bulb really comes on bright. You go from "I can live with this" to "WHY did I live without this". LOL!