Jennifer, thank you. Good morning to everyone, and thank you for joining the call. We are very excited to present our second quarter financials to our esteemed investors. At Nutex, everyone in the organization believes in the business model and is fully engaged and aligned to make the company even more successful. Before we dive into the financials, I'd like to take a step back to describe what Nutex Health is, our value proposition, where we came from, as well as how we see the future of healthcare. Nutex Health was founded in 2011 in Houston, Texas. It was founded based on the premise that Americans around the country need better accessibility to healthcare on a concierge level. We were one of the very first micro hospital companies in the country to provide this service. We started out serving emergency needs in Houston and eventually expanded our footprint throughout Texas in response to popular demand from consumers across the state. Around 2015, we started expansion into other states with our first hospital outside of Texas in Oklahoma City. We have continued the growth. Today, we have 21 micro-hospitals located in nine states. We continue to be among the leaders in the micro hospital segments in the United States. Let me take a moment to describe to our investors what a micro hospital is. A micro hospital is essentially a small, licensed hospital with many of the ancillary capabilities of a large hospital. Our micro hospitals generally have an emergency room, between four to 20 inpatient beds, an in-house pharmacy, an in-house laboratory, and an in-house radiology suite consisting of MRI, CT, ultrasound, and x-ray, all which is enclosed in a roughly 20 to 30,000 square foot facility. This is compared to a traditional large hospital which typically has anywhere between 100 to 500 plus inpatient beds. Our much smaller footprint allows us to build new facilities quicker and more efficiently in strategic locations around the country compared to constructing larger, traditional hospitals. There are services that we put in providing these micro hospitals include emergency services, medical surgical inpatient stays, outpatient imaging, outpatient labs, and outpatient procedures. The vast majority of our patients come through the emergency room, which has historically been our main line of service. Out of every 100 patients that come through our ER, we can treat and discharge roughly 95% of those patients. Of that 95%, an average of 90% will be discharged from the ER, and 5% will be admitted into our own hospital. The remaining 5% will be transferred to a larger hospital system. Another way to think about our model is the spectrum of care that we provide. As we all know, there are a lot of primary care physicians, urgent care centers, and retail clinics around the country. Walgreen, CVS, Walmart are a few national low-acuity retail clinics that come to mind. On the other hand of the spectrum, there are a lot of large major hospital systems around the country that provide high-acuity, intensive trauma-level care. We are neither a clinic nor are we a large hospital. We position ourselves right in the middle of the acuity care spectrum between the low-acuity clinics and the high-acuity major hospital systems. This is a very unique niche in the healthcare ecosystem that we operate in. There are very few companies around the country that provide care in the mid-acuity spectrum like we do. While our hospital may be small, our patient satisfaction is extremely high in every community that we are located in, as evidenced by our online review and ratings. For example, if you research every one of our hospitals online, you will see that our Google reviews are consistently 4.8 or above. This is very unusual in healthcare. In essence, our patients are very happy with our service. A primary reason for our great patient satisfaction is the culture of our physicians and staff. We partner with local physicians at every one of our hospitals and work in conjunction with them to operate the hospital. This alignment with the local community physicians and staff ensures our patients receive concierge care from a doctor with little or no wait time. Our philosophy is that if your physicians and staff are happy, then your patients are happy. Across the entire company, we consistently have very low employee turnover and rarely have staffing issues. Our physicians and staff engagement are extremely high, and our team often comments that working at Nutex Health is the best job they have ever had. Once again, this is very rare among the large hospital systems where staffing is a major issue among hospitals around the country today. So basically, we have a very simple formula. Create a recipe of engaged, aligned, and incentivized physicians and staff to provide concierge-level patient care and experience. This leads to repeat visits and word-of-mouth advertising, which further increases patient volumes, which increases revenue, which ultimately leads to what we have now, a profitable and growing company. We believe that there are multiple indicators that the increased demand for hospitals and emergency services is not slowing down anytime soon. With the graying of the population and the so-called silver tsunami that is expected to hit healthcare, we feel that we are in a very good position to help meet this demand for more concierge-level accessibility for a long time. Now to the second quarter. Overall, company-wide hospital visits were up 28% versus prior year for all of our hospitals. Our same-store mature hospital volumes were up an average of 10.3% in total billable visits over the prior year. Observation visit volumes were up 34% versus the second quarter of the prior year. Inpatient volumes were up 52% versus the prior year. On the de novo hospital growth side, we have four new hospitals that are under construction that we anticipate opening in the next six to 12 months, barring any unforeseen setbacks. New hospital openings include Post Falls, Idaho, Tampa, Florida, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and San Antonio, Texas. Beyond 2025, we have modified our annual growth projections slightly to project one to three new hospitals per year. We remain disciplined and only consider locations where the demand for small hospitals vastly outweighs the supply side. On the building and collection side, we continue to see growth monthly on the revenue per patient metric. From the end of 2022 to the end of 2023, based on an adjudicated date of service data, we achieved a 7% increase in revenue per patient. 2024 numbers are still being adjudicated, and we will report the results when ready. We have also already begun to engage in the arbitration process of the independent dispute resolution, whereas previously we had stopped at the open negotiation process. We believe that there is a lot of potential incremental value and revenue to be gained from arbitration as we believe that the insurers typically pay us very low the first time. Arbitration is a tool provided by the No Surprises Act to ensure providers receive fair treatment. In recent articles and public data, we are seeing that providers are prevailing 70% to 80% of the time in arbitration. We started this process in July 2024, and we will have more data in the fourth quarter on the success rate of these arbitration claims with the insurance carriers. On the population health side, we are also making some adjustments. We have divested our MSO in California ProCare and are in the process of selling Clinigence, our healthcare analytics and data company. Jon and Warren will go over these details later in the presentation. We believe that these portfolio changes we can focus on more profitable assets and continue to perform financially and reinvest these dollars into new markets. As we move through the remainder of the year, we will maintain our disciplined approach of managing our costs while continuing to invest appropriately in our strategic growth areas, which we believe should position the company favorably to meet our long-term objectives of being a sustainable and profitable company. With that, I will turn the call over to Jon Bates, Nutex's Chief Financial Officer, for more financial information for the second quarter. Jon?