Thanks, Vivek, and good afternoon, everyone. Since Vivek covered the Q1 revenue for each of the businesses, I'll focus my remarks on recapping the Q1 performance for the remainder of the P&L, as well as the Q1 balance sheet and cash flow, and along the way, provide commentary on any implications to our expectations for the full year. As you can see from the GAAP to non-GAAP reconciliation in the press release, adjusted gross margin for the quarter was 35%, which was higher than expected for this point in the year. The drivers of this favorability were roughly equally split between first, product mix, where we experienced a higher proportion of disposables revenue relative to capital during the quarter compared to our plan, and second, supply chain synergies captured earlier in the year than expected. These favorable items helped to offset much of the anticipated negative impact from the manufacturing under absorption related to the recent inventory reductions, which is reflected in the Q1 gross margin rate consistent with our previous guidance. I'll get into the implications to the full year outlook in a moment when taken into consideration with some other items. Adjusted SG&A expense was $115 million in Q1 and adjusted R&D was $21 million. Total adjusted operating expenses were up 3% year-over-year and reflect a combination of increased selling expenses and R&D investments. Adjusted operating expenses were 24.7% of revenue for the quarter, and we continue to expect the full year rate to be at or below 24%. Restructuring, integration and strategic transaction expenses were $16 million in the first quarter and related primarily to IT system integration and manufacturing network consolidation. Adjusted diluted earnings per share for the quarter was $0.96 compared to $1.74 last year. The current quarter results reflect net interest expense of $24 million. The first quarter adjusted effective tax rate was 28% and includes a discrete expense related to equity compensation. We continue to expect the full year adjusted effective tax rate to be around 23%. Diluted shares outstanding for the quarter were 24.4 million. And finally, adjusted EBITDA for Q1 decreased to $79 million compared to $102 million last year. The lower profitability on roughly similar levels of revenue reflects the prior year benefits from inventory builds, combined with the current period impacts from inventory reductions. Now moving on to cash flow and the balance sheet. For the quarter, free cash flow was $30 million, which represents the third consecutive quarter of positive free cash flow. Reductions in inventory contributed $14 million of cash and we remain on track to reduce inventory levels this year by our previously stated target of around $40 million, with most of this reduction coming in the first half of the year. 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 $10 million of cash spend for quality system and product-related remediation, $15 million on restructuring and integration and $15 million on CapEx for general maintenance and capacity expansion at our facilities as well as placement of revenue-generating infusion pumps with customers outside of the U.S. As anticipated and consistent with last year, our CapEx spend was a bit lighter in Q1 and should pick up over the course of the year. And just to wrap up on the balance sheet. We finished the quarter with $1.6 billion of debt and $251 million of cash. As we think about full year earnings in light of Q1 performance, we still plan to make any revisions to our guidance, if necessary, on our Q2 call, consistent with our historical cadence. For now, we believe the correct approach is to continue to assume adjusted gross margin for the year at our original guidance of 35%. While a portion of the supply chain synergies that provided upside in Q1 are more permanent in nature, there is volatility in the global environment that may impact fuel and transportation costs from the current levels. Also, and more importantly, currency and a higher for longer interest rate environment does make an impact as we don't report currency adjusted earnings. Over the course of the first quarter, we saw our large international sales currencies, yen, euro, et cetera, weaken against the dollar, with no strengthening of the dollar against our production currencies of the Mexican peso and Costa Rica colón, which for the full year adds up to over $10 million of EBITDA variance from the rates assumed in our plan. While we believe our supply chain synergies, if things remain stable, can offset most of this currency impact, it's too early in the year to be precise. And finally, as it relates to the Q1 gross margin benefit from product mix, our original full year forecast for capital and disposables revenue mix hasn't changed as we expect to be selling more capital in future quarters. To wrap up, we're happy with the first quarter performance, including improvement in our gross margin rate and continued progress in free cash flow generation. We remain focused on the foundational work that will drive earnings improvement in 2025 and beyond. I'll now hand the call back over to Vivek, who will provide updates on the specific initiatives underlying net earnings improvement.