Thank you, and good morning, everyone. Thank you for attending our third quarter earnings call. Before we start, I want to acknowledge the extraordinary efforts our team displayed during the recent weather events in the Southeast. Prior to the storms, we contacted more than 40,000 patients from the impacted areas to confirm they had the medical equipment they needed before the severe weather moved in. In advance of the storm, we made sure to deliver oxygen where needed. As a result, there were no material service interruptions. I want to thank the team again for their exceptional performance. Now turning to Q3 results. We are pleased to report another consistent quarter. With results in line with our expectations for revenue, adjusted EBITDA, and free cash flow. Compared to the previous year, revenue was flat with our two larger products, sleep and respiratory, delivering growth that offset a decline in diabetes. Sleep increased 3.5% respiratory was strong, increasing 8.6% while diabetes decreased 11.8%. Rounding out the numbers, which Jason will cover more in depth, we delivered an improvement in adjusted EBITDA margin and had a positive quarter for free cash flow. We completed the non-core asset sale we announced last quarter, refinanced our senior secured credit facility and, paid down another $50 million of debt. As a result, we are now committing to delevering further with a new multi-year target set at 2.5 times net leverage. Over the past quarter, our focus has been on establishing a One Adapt approach to operating this business, which means rolling out standard work, new operating structures, and identifying growth opportunities. Let's start with sleep. According to the American Academy of Sleep Medicine, there are approximately 30 million adults in the U.S. living with obstructive sleep apnea, but only 20% have been diagnosed. This market is large and it is growing rapidly, partly because of increased awareness of OSA and the negative health implications by going untreated. As detection technology evolves, we believe more people will be prompted to seek treatment for OSA with many of those patients seeking CPAP therapy. There are reasons AdaptHealth is the number one market leader in sleep. It's because our respiratory therapists and sleep coaches provide best-in-class adherence programs, and our resupply team delivers a highly reliable and convenient experience to more than 1.6 million patients. The opportunity for growth in sleep is to increase new patient conversion rates. Right now, approximately 75% of the referrals we receive are fulfilled. We are working on opportunities to improve this conversion rate by introducing a new self-scheduling feature in myAPP, thereby eliminating the need to reach the patient by phone, and standardizing workflow processes to eliminate the back-and-forth of getting services for new patients approved. Turning to respiratory, based on data from the American Lung Association, we know that more than 35 million people in the U.S. are living with chronic lung disease like asthma and COPD. Supporting these patients requires a commitment to excellence, which we have. Our clinical coordination team is unique in the market, in that, we have multiple levels of respiratory therapist care. As a result, we deliver strong clinical outcomes designed to help lower hospital readmission rates. It is this level of clinical support that differentiates us in results in growth. To maintain our position as the number one market leader in this area, we are focused on optimizing our workflows and exploring opportunities to expand our product portfolio to better help patients living at home with respiratory conditions. Our sleep and respiratory product lines currently make up the majority of our revenue and we expect continued solid performance in these areas. We must, however, fix our performance and execution issues that we have in diabetes, which currently represents 17% of revenue. Following last quarter's results, I turned my attention to our diabetes product line and found the outlook was much worse than I thought after my first two months. The reality is the market is growing, our competitors are growing and we are not. We acted immediately by dismissing several members of the diabetes leadership team and through a series of diagnostic reviews, we uncovered systemic operational issues that we need to fix. We have taken swift actions to turn this around. First, we appointed a new leadership team; one, a former CEO of an AdaptHealth acquisition with a background in delivering exceptional service in sleep and home medical supplies; and we brought in a seasoned sales leader with experience in diabetes. Second, we integrated the resupply of our diabetes products into our sleep resupply center of excellence to leverage its leadership, replicate processes, and increase performance. Third, we know that acquiring new CGM patients and being able to timely service them is the single most important thing we need to do. Notwithstanding a dynamic market environment, executing here is within our control. And we are taking the necessary actions to improve across the Board. Our diabetes improvement efforts are now underway, yet we expect that it will take us a few quarters to demonstrate results. Therefore, we are guiding the balance of the year down based on what we learned and to provide an appropriate amount of time for our actions to have an impact. Unlocking growth in diabetes is an imperative. The American Diabetes Association reports that more than 38 million Americans have diabetes with almost 100 million being pre-diabetic. If we put all these numbers in perspective, there are more than 100 million potential patients for AdaptHealth to serve in the United States. Today, we proudly serve 4.2 million patients a year. In simplest terms, growth is about providing exceptional service to the increasing number of patients that need our support. Another topic I would like to update you on is the progress we are making on the technology front. Last quarter, I mentioned that we were doing a few low-cost experiments with AI and automation. I am happy to report that this is moving quickly. And we have moved from inception to production. The mission was to use AI to deal with the massive amount of incoming unstructured data we receive, which is an ongoing healthcare challenge. With the way things are done, we receive more than 5 million pages of faxes every month and we rely on a combination of people and technology to get the information in those faxes into the correct workflow. In a matter of weeks, we successfully automated parts of the workflow and our new automated process enabled by AI has proven to be 99.6% accurate compared to 89% with our legacy process. This was the first step to prove we can do so with accuracy. We are optimistic about our ability to rapidly deploy this technology across our workflows in a way that is responsible. We see AI as a viable option for us to improve our performance, reliability, and efficiency. We are prioritizing use cases that will improve our ability to deliver exceptional service. I think it's good to note that due to improved operational rigor and successful cost management initiatives this past quarter, we were able to invest in people and technology while delivering improved bottom-line results. In addition, this is the last quarter we will report results as a single segment. We are moving to a four-segment reporting structure that consists of sleep health, respiratory health, diabetes health, and wellness at home. This shift to segment reporting will allow for increased transparency and insight into our performance. Most importantly, it will enable us to focus our resources and architect our growth in each segment. I continue to be optimistic about the road ahead. We have identified growth opportunities. We are assembling a high-performing team and investing in areas that allow us to serve even more patients in their homes. Our focus is on execution, and continuously improving every day. And with that, I will turn it over to Jason.