Thanks, Vivek, and good afternoon, everyone. Since Vivek covered the Q4 revenue for each of the businesses, I'll focus my remarks on first, recapping the full year revenue performance compared to our original expectations; second, discussing Q4 performance for the remainder of the P&L, along with the Q4 balance sheet and cash flow; and third, providing guidance on our expectations for 2024. So to recap our full year 2023 revenue performance, consolidated adjusted revenue was down 1% on a reported basis and flat constant currency. At the business unit level, consumables revenue for the year was down 1% reported in flat constant currency compared to our original expectations of mid-single-digit growth. The shortfall was due primarily to the vascular access product category, where the decline was larger than anticipated, along with a few other variances within the business unit. But Q4 was important because after three previous quarters of stability in Vascular Access, we finally saw sequential improvement. Infusion Systems revenue for the year was up 2% on a reported basis and up 4% constant currency, in line with our original guidance of mid-single digits, driven by a combination of the LVP and syringe product lines. And Vital Care was down 3% reported and down 2% constant currency for the full year, which is at the low end of our original guidance range of flat plus or minus a little. Here, IV Solutions was the largest gap to our expectations, offset partially by solid growth within the temperature management and critical care product categories. Moving on to Q4 results and further down the P&L. As you can see from the GAAP to non-GAAP reconciliation in the press release, gross margin for the fourth quarter was 34%, which was in line with our expectations and reflects the impact from lower manufacturing absorption as we continue to reduce inventory and improve cash flow. Recall that for the first six quarters following the acquisition, we increased inventory levels each quarter by an average of almost $50 million in order to, one, address the legacy SM backorder situation; two, build bridge stock in anticipation of the new EU MDR requirements, the effective date of which was eventually delayed; and three, bolster safety stock levels across the combined company. However, as each one of these situations evolved, in early 2023, we took action to bring inventory levels in line with underlying demand. And during the third quarter of '23, we decreased inventory levels for the first time. We said on the Q3 earnings call, that we expected inventory reductions to accelerate in the fourth quarter, and they did as we saw a cash flow benefit from inventory reduction of over $60 million. However, the lower production levels in Q3, and to some extent Q4, negatively impacted gross margins in the quarter. Adjusted SG&A expense was $113 million in Q4 and adjusted R&D was $22 million. Total adjusted operating expenses were up 3.5% year-over-year and reflect a combination of increased selling expenses from higher revenues, along with lower incentive compensation in Q4 2022. Restructuring, integration and strategic transaction expenses were $11 million in the fourth quarter and related primarily to acquisition integration. Adjusted diluted earnings per share for the quarter was $1.57 compared to $1.60 last year. The current quarter results reflect net interest expense of $24 million, which is an increase over the prior year of $4 million and equates to just under $0.15 on a per share basis. Fourth quarter adjusted effective tax rate was a benefit of 1% and includes certain discrete benefits in year-end items that contributed approximately $0.35 per share. Diluted shares outstanding for the quarter were 24.3 million. And finally, adjusted EBITDA for Q4 decreased 11% to $86 million compared to $96 million last year. Now moving on to cash flow and the balance sheet. For the quarter, free cash flow was a positive $61 million, which represents a significant step up relative to Q3 free cash flow of $14 million. And if you recall, Q3 was the first quarter of positive free cash flow since the acquisition if you exclude the onetime benefit from the accounts receivable sales program in Q1 of 2023. This improvement was driven primarily by a reduction in inventory during the quarter of more than $60 million. The focus on inventory allowed us to generate meaningful free cash flow while still investing in the areas that will drive future returns. These investments included $14 million of cash spend for quality system and product-related remediation for legacy SM, $11 million on restructuring and integration and $30 million on CapEx for general maintenance and capacity expansion at our facilities as well as placement of revenue-generating infusion pumps with customers outside the U.S. And just to wrap up on the balance sheet, we finished the quarter with $1.6 billion of debt and $255 million of cash and investments. Moving forward to the 2024 outlook, we expect full year consolidated adjusted revenue growth in the low to mid-single-digit range, and we expect the growth rates for each of the underlying business units to be in line with the longer-term outlook that we've discussed before, which is mid-single digits for both consumables and infusion systems and roughly flat for Vital Care. The consumables growth reflects a combination of volume and some price, with volume increases driven by continued share gain in core infusion, modest recovery in vascular access and the benefit of higher growth markets for oncology and specialty. The infusion systems growth reflects normal market growth, a little bit of price and the assumption of limited P&L impact from Plum Duo in 2024, given the usual lag between customer contract signing and implementation. Moving further down the P&L, we expect adjusted gross margin for the full year to be approximately 35%. The 35% includes price increases offsetting the negative impacts from labor inflation in our Mexican plants, as well as continued pressure from the peso exchange rate, and assumes a relatively stable environment for freight rates and fuel. It also reflects the temporary impact from lower absorption as we expect further inventory reductions over the course of 2024. In terms of progression over the year, we expect gross margin to be lowest in the first quarter as a result of the delayed P&L recognition from the inventory reduction that occurred in Q4 of 2023, with improvement over the course of 2024 from higher manufacturing volumes as inventory reductions taper and revenue growth takes effect. We are planning for adjusted operating expenses as a percentage of revenue to be similar to 2023 levels, which is just under 24%, reflecting the benefit from synergies offsetting the impact from resetting incentive compensation plans and general inflationary increases. Net interest expense is expected to be approximately $105 million based on current market forecasts for interest rates as well as the roll-off of a portion of our interest rate swaps. The adjusted tax rate should be around 23%, which is our normalized tax rate before discrete items. And finally, diluted shares outstanding are estimated to average $24.6 million during the year. Bringing these components together results in 2024 adjusted EBITDA in the range of $330 million to $370 million and adjusted EPS in the range of $4.40 to $5.10 per share. Now on to cash flow. We ended 2023 with $83 million of free cash flow for the year, which is driven mostly by the onetime benefit from the implementation of the accounts receivable factoring program during the first quarter. For 2024, we expect free cash flow to be around the same levels as 2023, but to be driven entirely by operations. And the final amount will depend on, one, the degree of inventory reduction; and two, the amount that we choose to invest in quality remediation and integration activities as there is value in completing this work sooner to capture additional synergies. In terms of remaining inventory reduction, we said on the last call that the total opportunity was ballpark $100 million. And after more than $60 million captured in Q4, that would leave roughly $40 million left to go, and we think that's a fair assumption headed into 2024. In addition, we expect to see our CapEx requirements in 2024 to be in the range of $90 million to $110 million. Timing of free cash flow throughout the year should be consistent with our historical trend, which is lighter in the first quarter as a result of payments for prior year annual incentive compensation, with improvement over the remainder of the year helped by the benefit of revenue growth. To wrap up, we're happy with the sequential improvements in Q4 revenue that we saw across all three businesses as well as the meaningful step-up in free cash flow. For 2024, we're focused on foundational work that will drive earnings improvement in 2025 and beyond, which Vivek will expand upon. Now I'll hand the call back over to Vivek.