Thank you, Mollie. Good morning everyone, and welcome to our second quarter 2024 earnings call. We'll just jump right in and hit some of the key highlights. Pleased to report, during the second quarter, our financial performance showed year-over-year increases in each of the major categories that we highlight in our earnings release. So we finished the quarter with strong sales and solid sales pipeline, and we were able to reiterate our 2024 guidance ranges. In particular, we're seeing strong sales pipelines on CredentialStream in our credentialing area, ShiftWizard in our scheduling area, and our new enterprise competency suite in learning, and we'll talk more about some of these later in the call, which we believe that emerging enterprise competency suite is the most complete offering of its kind in the industry. I'm also excited about ongoing progress towards key development milestones on our HealthStream platform and as I've promised last time, we're going to give a bit of a platform update, at least through the technical lens of developmental progress. We're beginning to see the first examples of interoperability between our applications, which is kind of the great promise of the platform. And we're seeing how customers and partners utilize components of the platform to enhance interoperability with their other systems like ERPs and EHRs. Amid all those positive developments, we're going to have to talk about and contend with two one-time customer related events in the second quarter that resulted in some temporary headwinds that we're confident we'll push through over the course of the year. So, let's address those kind of upfront here. One headwind impacting revenue growth in the quarter was based on the timing anomaly at one of our larger customers. Importantly, we believe this anomaly will self correct over the remainder of the year such that it is not expected to negatively impact full year revenue. What happened was both simple and understandable. We'd like to avoid it next time, but simple and understandable. Essentially, administrative responsibility for assigning and setting completion dates or completion requirements for a certain cohort of learners, it was obviously a big cohort, because it's a big customer, changed. And what happened was, thousands of learners who were previously required to complete certain courses in 90 days were given 365 days to complete the courses by the assignment. And of course, if you're anything like me and someone says, well, you have to finish something in 90 days or you have to finish something in 365 days, what do most people do? They put it off, that's exactly what happened here. Once the customer realized kind of what had happened in this administrative function in our system, we're both taking steps to address it, because they don't -- they also don't want tens of thousands of employees rushing on the last day to do this, so it kind of overwhelms the system, they need to take it throughout the year. And so they're self-correcting this process. And once we took steps and the customer realized what had happened, we think that it'll get -- the completion rates will accelerate for the remainder of the year and come back in full year as originally forecasted, despite the unexpected slowdown. And the reason this happened and why it's tied to economics is, for a subset of content that we sell this customer, we bill and recognize revenue based on consumption that occurred in the quarter. So again, for a subset of content we sell this customer, it is based on actual consumption. So that is why slower consumption of certain content in the quarter resulted in lower revenue and while accelerated consumption in the rest of the year is expected to normalize full year revenues for the customer. This is the only instance of consumption based billing that we have at scale and we do not plan to expand this type of billing model going forward. At any rate, we expect the revenue to catch up in the second half of the year, so we're not particularly concerned about it. The second one-time customer event that is in front of us and also currently in the quarter had an impact in the quarter and also as we look forward is due to the widely publicized bankruptcy of one of our strategic accounts, Steward Health Care System. Historically, a great customer, ran into some financial difficulties and declared bankruptcy during the second quarter. The impact of missed payments from periods prior to the bankruptcy filing had a negative impact on net income, adjusted EBITDA, earnings per share, and operating income in the second quarter. We expect the negative impacts to revenue and other financial metrics in the last half of the year as well. We've estimated these negative impacts and they are factored into our reiterated guidance. At present, we believe that the impact from this bankruptcy may move us toward the lower end of our revenue guidance range and we'll see how it impacts us as we move forward. Because that said, it's possible that the bankruptcy will allow the customer to make payments in the second half of the year and as we continue to provide services. And it's also possible that they've announced their divesting of facilities, that some of those divested facilities and land, and friendly places are places that also use our services, in which case we would be able to generate some of the business in the second half of the year. Those are potential mitigating factors and we're not counting on them. We expect this customer bankruptcy to have an ongoing negative impact to our financials this year and again, it's factored into our reiterated guidance. Although I did note that we believe the impact may move us towards the lower end of our revenue guidance range. Before we get any further the call, I want to summarize our business for the benefit of anyone who is new to HealthStream's story. First and foremost, HealthStream is a healthcare technology company dedicated to developing, credentialing, and scheduling the healthcare workforce through SaaS based solutions, each of which are becoming more valuable because of the interoperability they're achieving through our hStream technology platform. Historically, we sell our solutions on a subscription basis under contracts that average three to five years in length, which makes our revenues recurring and predictable. In fact, 96% of our revenues are subscription based. As I just mentioned, we've also started to open our sales channels directly to healthcare professionals and nursing students across the continuous healthcare training. We are profitable, we have no interest-bearing debt and a strong cash balance of $83 million. We are solely focused on healthcare and more specifically the healthcare workforce, the 12.3 million healthcare professionals and nursing students in the United States comprise the core addressable market for our SaaS solutions. Before turning it over to our CFO, Scotty Roberts, I'd like to highlight some successes that we've achieved in each of these core application areas. In learning, scheduling, credentialing. The accomplishments during the quarter made some really fantastic progress. Let's start with our learning application suite. We've got some exciting announcements in the second half of the year related to enhancing the capabilities of this very powerful area of our business, the learning application suite. The Health Stream Learning Center application is the flagship product and continues to be strong in the market. And importantly, when the HealthStream learning Center is up for renewal, it frequently presents out customers an opportunity to purchase multiple new solutions along with it. This results in expanding wallet share. We've talked about that on previous calls and I want to give an example of expanding wallet share that happened on HealthStream Learning Center renewal in the second quarter. One of our West Coast customers used their renewal of the HealthStream Learning Center as an opportunity to add additional products to those they we're already using, including the adoption, their adoption of our new Insights plus Reporting and Analytics tool. Due to the growth of their organization, they also added approximately 5,400 users to their base of 22,000. So a meaningful growth there. The new five-year agreement includes 3.5% pricing escalator and that's new, we're really working hard now to work pricing escalators into renewal contracts. In this case, we did a 3.5% annual pricing escalator and that's going to give us some nice line of sight into year-over-year growth. The annual recurring revenue from this renewal increased 111% from approximately $376,000 to $795,000, making this a really good example of expanding wallet share in our existing customer base. Let's move to our scheduling application suite. We believe that our SaaS application, known as ShiftWizard, is the best scheduling solution in healthcare and that it will only become more valuable to customers as it begins to integrate with other applications through our hStream technology platform. In the second quarter, revenues from ShiftWizard grew 34% over the prior year quarter as customers continue to report high customer satisfaction with this application. As of the second quarter of 2024, ShiftWizard has become the largest revenue generator in our portfolio of scheduling products and services and that includes legacy applications like ANSOS and Enterprise Visibility. So it's a nice milestone during the second quarter for the go-forward application to become bigger in revenue mass than all the other legacy applications in the portfolio, the family of products we call our scheduling family of products. So that's an exciting kind of milestone that's achieved during the second quarter. We contracted a number of great new customers to ShiftWizard in the quarter, such as Stillwater Medical Center, Mary Free Bed Rehabilitation, Roswell Park and Read Hospital are really nice examples of the expansion of ShiftWizard. I'll wrap up this portion of the call with an update on our credentialing solutions also enjoyed a successful quarter, both in terms of competitive take outs and conversions from our legacy solutions to CredentialStream. So as reported on the G2 website, CredentialStream is best-in-class solution for credentialing, privileging, enrolling physicians. In the second quarter, CredentialStream added 34 new customer organizations where approximately 65% of these customers were new and 35% were migrations from our legacy credentialing applications, which we really like to see that when they move up from the legacy applications to the CredentialStream application suite. Representative of these CredentialStream customers in the second quarter are many highly respected healthcare organizations like Baptist South Florida, Oregon Health and Science Medicine, Penn Medicine and Pine Rest Christian Mental Health, so really nice broad spectrum of new customers, 34 in the quarter and that's interesting because that kind of matches the growth profile of that application at 34% as well. So 34 and 34, it's fantastic. Good results team. I'll turn it over to Scotty Roberts for the review of the financials and they'll come back to me and as promised, we'll give a platform update on hStream, the platform, and we'll talk about a new market that's emerging for one of our exciting products, CredentialStream. We'll hit both of those in the end. I'll turn it over to Scotty for a few minutes.