Thank you, Kim, and welcome everyone to today's fiscal Q2 earnings call. This was another solid quarter with consolidated organic revenue growth of 7% led by double-digit growth in both our daily silicone hydrogel lenses at CooperVision and our office and surgical portfolio at CooperSurgical. We also continued executing at a high level, delivering operational improvements and OpEx leverage that drove double-digit non-GAAP earnings growth. Similar to other companies, we're dealing with a more complex global operating environment, but we're controlling what we can by executing well. Including taking share delivering leverage, launching products, and completing capacity expansion projects. We'll cover all of that on today's call. Moving to the numbers. Consolidated revenues were $1,002,000,000 up 6% year over year or up 7% organically. CooperVision reported quarterly revenues of $670,000,000 up 5% or up 7% organically. CooperSurgical posted quarterly revenues of $333,000,000, up 8% or up 7% organically. Margins improved nicely, and non-GAAP earnings were $0.96 up 14% year over year. For CooperVision and reporting growth rates organically, The Americas grew 8%, EMEA 6% and Asia Pac 5%. Within categories, torics and multifocals grew 7%, and spheres were up 6%. Within modalities, our daily silicone hydrogel lenses, MyDay and Clarity, grew 10%. And our silicone hydrogel FRP lenses, Biofinity and Avera, were up 6%. Our myopia management portfolio grew 19% with MiSight up 35%. Turning to products and starting with daily silicone hydrogel lenses. MyDay continued growing double digits with particular strength in torics multifocals and our innovative Energous offering. We remain very bullish on this product family as we increase availability in new markets and in new channels, to capitalize on opportunities from greater penetration in existing accounts and with new customers. With improved capacity, we're back to being aggressive and that can be seen in a number of areas, including increasing availability of our multifocal and extended toric ranges, new launch activities such as MyDay Energous in Canada, and our upgraded Clarity One Day Sphere with WetLock technology in Japan, and expanded private label discussions. A lot of this activity is tied to increasing fitting sets and trial lenses, so we expect this to accelerate revenue growth starting in fiscal Q4 which is supported by the strong fitting activity we're seeing today. Add a little more color, we just launched MyDay Energous with its innovative digital boost technology in Canada through a series of well-covered events, and early feedback is extremely positive. We're receiving significant requests for fitting sets, and initial orders are rolling in. Meanwhile, our MyDay toric parameter expansion which provides eye care practitioners with the widest SKU range by far, for a daily toric lens continues progressing well across North America and Europe. And we'll be launching the range expansion in targeted Asia Pac markets soon. And lastly, MyDay Multifocal's unique advanced three ad design paired with its easy fitting system is performing exceptionally well as market availability continues to increase. Turning to Clarity. We posted solid results with this high quality, lower priced lens portfolio offering a great alternative to MyDay. The redesigned multifocal, which now mirrors my days, design, is a fantastic product and grew double digits this quarter. And I could speak to this product's great handling, comfort, and visual acuity as I'm happily wearing them right now reading this script. Moving to frequent replacement lenses, Biofinity continues strengthen its position as the number one contact lens in the world with more people wearing it than any other lens. We're seeing nice growth throughout its full portfolio of market leading prescription options, including Spears, Torix, multifocals, extended ranges, made to order products, and Energous. Biofinity provides eye care practitioners the ability to fit an amazing 99.9% of all patients by far the widest offering of any contact lens family on the market. Turning to MiSight, we saw growth in bidding activity accelerate this quarter with revenue reaching $25,000,000 up 35%. A key component to the improved bidding activity is the implementation of a new pricing model initiated following the conclusion of our global pricing review that confirmed that the annual wearer cost is not a significant barrier. To greater bidding activity. Price certainly matters in training eye care practitioners and educating parents on myopia is important. But the key driver is just getting kids into the lens. Once kids begin wearing MiSight, they love it. And with retention rates running around 90%, they stay in it. And when parents verify the benefits of the treatment with their ECPs, they're sold on the technology. With this data, our focus is now heavily on reducing upfront thinning barriers by offering promotions such as an initial one to three months free. This provides a no risk opportunity for parents to get comfortable with their children wearing contact lenses and for kids and young adults to get comfortable wearing contacts for the first time. With a broader rollout of this strategy along with the launch of a large key account private label deal, we're already seeing a nice acceleration in bidding activity in EMEA. And we expect similar success in other markets. This new initial pre fitting period will result in a moderate headwind in Q3 but based on current fitting activity, we expect a considerably stronger Q4. And lastly, we're progressing well with our launch planning for MiSight in Japan, along with MyDay MiSight in EMEA with both anticipated to occur in early 2026. Moving to CooperSurgical, we reported revenues of $333,000,000 up 8% or up 7% organically. The quarter was driven by success in our surgical medical devices, labor and delivery portfolio, and PARAGARD. Fertility was a little softer than we were expecting, so let me start there. For the quarter, fertility revenues were $127,000,000 up 3% and up 2% organically. Although supported by positive signs, such as double digit growth in our donor business, and in our Witness System consumables that Fertility Labs use to track activity, overall growth was lower than expected due primarily to market softness. This was largely tied to Asia Pac where fertility cycles continued to decline year over year, and from fertility clinics managing cash tighter, which is including delaying capital purchases and installments. and our growth. We expect this softness to continue and to put pressure on market growth Having said that, cycle growth in EMEA and The Americas remain solid, which supports the market near term. And we remain incredibly bullish on the long term prospects for fertility as the underlying growth fundamentals remain intact. Including women delaying childbirth, improving access to treatment, increasing patient awareness, increasing benefit coverage, and improving technology. Additionally, it's estimated that one in six people worldwide will experience infertility at some point in their lives, So this is an issue that impacts a lot of people. And as a leader in the space, we will continue delivering innovation, launching new products and services, providing extensive clinical training, and expanding geographically. Moving to office and surgical. We posted sales of $206,000,000, up 13% or up 10% organically. As mentioned on our last earnings call, we expected a strong Q2, and we delivered. Performance was driven by strength in minimally invasive gynecological surgical devices, such as our Ally Uterine Manipulator portfolio, and within labor and delivery with products such as Fido Pillow, our cervical ripening balloon. Although not included in organic growth, we also saw considerable strength in OBP Surgical, our most recent acquisition of an innovative suite of single use lighted cordless surgical retractors which grew 31%. PARAGARD grew 18% this quarter, supported primarily by the conclusion of buying activity before our May 1 price increase. But also due to continued interest in our new single hand inserter, which we launched earlier this year. With PARAGARD now having grown 15% through the first six months of the year, heavily driven by channel fill. We now expect a mid teens decline in fiscal Q3 before a flattish Q4 resulting in low to mid single digit growth for the full fiscal year. To conclude, let me comment on our revenue guidance. Which we're tightening and raising at the midpoint. This incorporates our solid Q2 performance and the positive impact from updated currency rates. Offset by lower organic growth rates that corresponds to a reduction in our market growth assumptions for contact lenses and fertility. For contact lenses, the industry grew 4% in calendar Q1, so we're reducing growth expectations to the four to 6% range for the year. Down from five to 7%. This new range matches the industry's historical growth range which we saw for many years pre COVID. With this change, we're adjusting CooperVision's organic growth expectation to 6% to 7%. To be fair, industry pricing remains solid and consumption remains healthy, so this may prove conservative depending on market conditions and channel inventory. For CooperSurgical, we're reducing market growth expectations for fertility to the low single digits down from mid to upper single digits, and correspondingly reducing our fertility growth expectations. This is partially offset by the strength we've seen in PARAGARD, but still reduces CooperSurgical's consolidated organic growth rate to the three and a half to four and a half percent range. Again, it's important to note, our commercial execution at CooperVision and CooperSurgical remains strong. And we're taking share. But against an expectation for softer market growth. And with that, I'll turn the call over to Brian to cover our financial results in more detail including our earnings guidance. Thank you, Al, and good afternoon, everyone. Most of my commentary will be on a non GAAP basis, so please refer to the earnings release for a reconciliation of GAAP to non GAAP results. For the second fiscal quarter, consolidated revenues were $1,002,000,000.000 up 6% as reported and up 7% organically. Consolidated gross margin was 68%, up from 67.3% driven by continuing efficiency gains and mix. Operating expenses increased 6% but declined as a percent of revenue to 43.1% driven by leverage in several functional areas, as prior investment activity continues to yield positive returns. One line item worth highlighting this quarter is R and D. Where expenses increased 21%. Investments in this area were higher than historical levels, for both CooperVision and CooperSurgical as development work continues on several exciting projects. For competitive reasons, I won't get into the details, but we're certainly looking forward to launching these new products in future years. Consolidated operating income was up 11%, improving the operating margin to 24.9%. Below operating income interest expense was $23,500,000 and the effective tax rate was 14.6%. Non GAAP EPS was $0.96 up 14% with roughly 101,000,000 average shares outstanding. Free cash flow was $18,000,000 with CapEx of 78,000,000 Net debt increased slightly to 2,470,000,000.00 while our bank defined leverage ratio reduced. To 1.9 times. Lastly, repurchased approximately 537,000 shares of stock back this quarter for roughly $40,600,000 This leaves $215,800,000 of availability under our Board approved $1,000,000,000 repurchase plan. Moving to fiscal 2025 guidance. We're adjusting our revenue guidance to incorporate Q2 improving FX rates and updated market assumptions. On a consolidated basis, this translates to revenues of roughly 4,110,000,000.00 to 4,150,000,000.00 up roughly 5.5% to 6.5% or up five to 6% organically. CooperVision's revenue guidance range is now 2,760,000,000.00 to $2,790,000,000 up roughly 6% to 7% as reported and up six to 7% organically. CooperSurgical's range is 1.35 to 1,360,000,000.00. Up five to 6% as reported. Or up 3.5 to four and a half percent organically. Regarding gating for revenues, we expect organic growth in Q4 to be stronger than Q3 when considering year over year comps the timing around the rollout of products at CooperVision, and the gating impact of Paragard for CooperSurgical.