Thanks, Scott, and thank you to everyone for joining today. We were really pleased to once again deliver strong results for the quarter, and Ken and I and our whole team are highly focused on ensuring we achieve our financial targets while providing increased transparency to investors. To that end, this quarter, we returned to both profitability and positive cash flow from operations ahead of our established guidance. This has been and remains our leadership team's primary focus as we work to strengthen our foundation of the organization. We still have more work to do to ensure our long-term financial success and we are actively working on fiscal year 2023 with planned spending reductions, which include aligning our cost structure to various scenarios with InteliSwab. By doing this, we aim to ensure the company has a stable foundation from which to deploy the cash we expect to generate from COVID-19 sales in coming quarters to fund future growth investments. We will provide more details on this endeavor in our coming quarters as we finalize our planning for next fiscal year and beyond. To this end, we are continuing our transformation journey now and had a number of key learnings in the quarter. As we look to strengthen our foundation we are putting in place, scenario plans to account for varying levels of InteliSwab revenue in coming quarters, while also working to leverage our new enterprise capabilities that we built ramping this test. Examples of our organizational improvements include utilizing our super factory capabilities to increase production efficiency for our OraQuick platform and as assay card that is for HIV and HCV as well on our new automated equipment. We are also beginning to evaluate new complementary product offerings, expanded commercial channels, and of course, strategic partnerships too. Finally, as we develop greater visibility on our financial progress, we will begin to look at inorganic growth opportunities as well as our capital structure. But as I've shared before, the mantra underpinning our day-to-day operations of our strategic transformation are to innovate and operate with disciplined execution and accountability. And now I'm going to transition and provide some additional granularity on our business units beginning with our Diagnostic segment. This quarter, there were three significant emerging themes within our diagnostics portfolio. The first was our expanded retail success with our InteliSwab COVID-19 test, which could support a longer commercial tale for this product. Second, we saw the government take an increasingly active role in global public health challenges with the Together Take Me Home HIV testing program sponsored by the CDC administered by Emory University, as well as our new BARDA contract for version two of our Ebola testing. And finally, we made progress on our efficiency journey as we look to improve our overall margin structure of the organization. As we focus on InteliSwab, we had strong volume in Q3 and as we discussed last quarter, we have received delivery orders from the U.S. Federal government, which allow it to order up to approximately 90 million tests. As of the end of the third quarter, we have fulfilled 30 million of these orders and outside the federal government, we also had a number of other meaningful InteliSwab wins. This quarter, we won a retail contract with a midsized grocery store chain with the opportunity to be in up to 400 stores nationally. We signed an employee testing contract with a top Fortune 500 company and we are currently available on walmart.com as well. And additionally, we signed a contract with amazon.com under which the retailer will carry and fulfill InteliSwab orders from consumers. And given the improvements in our capacity, we are actively engaging potential customers in public health, government institutions and the retail settings, and we hope to have more positive developments as we continue to serve health needs through the upcoming respiratory virus events. Our second major theme that has emerged this quarter is OraSure’s strong relationship with U.S. government agencies and the more active role we see our government taking in public health. Given the ease and simplicity of our test designs, we believe we are an ideal partner for outreach testing and critical diseases, and the global pandemic has shown how the government can play a more active part in addressing public health crises. This trend is well demonstrated by our announcement this quarter that we will be supplying our OraQuick HIV in-home test as part of the CDCs Together Take Me Home program, which will mail our HIV OTC kits to consumers requesting them, many of whom are in high risk or other vulnerable communities not well supported by the current healthcare systems. The total program administered by Emory University is valued at $41.5 million over five years, and while only a portion of that amount is for test procurement, this program has the potential to help grow our domestic HIV business and could serve as a case study for similar future programs in the U.S. and other jurisdictions beyond. We were also awarded $8.6 million from BARDA to develop a second generation Ebola test with improved sensitivity and longer shelf life that will also be developed utilizing our automated super factory manufacturing process. Currently, Uganda and the Democratic Republic of Congo are experiencing significant Ebola outbreaks and we have seen increased interest in procuring Ebola test from several organizations. Finally, we continue to focus on production efficiency as we scale our super factory and plan for future volume scenarios around InteliSwab. We have submitted our new packaging configuration to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for approval, and this new configuration is designed to reduce costs through lower material usage and due to its smaller size overall lower freight expense. If authorized, it will enable more efficient use of warehouse space internally and for our customers. We have also begun process development to transition our legacy HIV, HCV and Ebola products over to our new super factory automation, which will lead to labor savings and efficiencies as we consolidate around the single manufacturing process. To this point, we are reviewing our facility footprint and looking for areas where standardization across product lines can use our cost structure. Finally, we are performing a top down review of our supplier agreements to also look for areas of material savings, including the possibility of bringing some of the more expensive raw material production in-house. These efficiency programs will help on our journey to improving profitability and providing the cash flow for investments in the future. Next up, I'd like to discuss our commercial progress with our Molecular Solutions business unit. Beginning with our core collection kits, our core kits business was down 24% this quarter on a year-over-year basis as we saw continued pressure from some of our more consumer-focused customers. We see this recent softness in the business as more transitory in nature as some of our more consumer-oriented customers have delayed orders or brought down inventory levels given financial uncertainty. We remain optimistic, however, over the long-term and the growth prospects for this segment, and we are working very hard to add new significant customers in diagnostics and clinical lab services, which we know well to quickly accelerate our return to growth. To this end, we recently received an important new clearance for ORAcollect•Dx from the U.S. FDA for general prescription and over-the-counter use. OraSure receive this designation through its partnership with Grifols to support alpha-1 deficiency testing in patients who are symptomatic for chronic obstructive pulmonary disorder or maybe at risk for alpha-1 deficiency. Of course, alpha-1 deficiency raises patients risks for lung disorders and it's estimated that about 3% of the 15 million COPD patients in the United States have alpha-1 deficiency. Grifols, our partner offers free AlphaID screening kits supporting alpha-1 deficiency screening that utilize our ORAcollect•Dx device. The partnership with Grifols represents valuable opportunity for us in addition and very important, this clearance also means that our Oragene•Dx and ORAcollect•Dx products maybe used now at home by an adult without direction from a healthcare professional when approved in conjunction with a partner or a therapeutic – partner, therapeutic or device, and without us having to obtain a separate new FDA approval. We have seen more and more opportunities for clear collection kits to be used in conjunction with drugs and devices as healthcare increasingly shifts toward precision medicine where the need and opportunity here is to identify target patient populations for targeted therapeutics. We also saw some positive developments in the microbiome testing space this quarter with our Diversigen subsidiary. First, revenue for the segments recovered as anticipated and was up 63% sequentially to $2 million. Secondly, we saw the first microbiome-based therapeutic received the FDA's Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee approval. Along with other drugs in the pipeline, there is the potential for multiple new biological license applications to be approved by the FDA in the coming year, which could be a strong catalyst for research funding. This quarter, we also announced a partnership with Mars Petcare to create the world’s largest biobank around microbiome data for cats and dogs. Samples collected as part of the biobank study will be analyzed and Diversigen will sequence the DNA of the microorganisms in the sample. Mars Petcare scientists will then use the data to generate insights about what cat and dog microbiomes look like over time, including on health and disease. Like with our diagnostics portfolio, we are actively working on cost reductions and margin improvement projects. We are currently looking at several opportunities to reduce material and logistics costs across our product lines and working on further integrating our Diversigen and Novosanis subsidiaries to reduce expenses. Now I'd like to turn the call over to Ken to provide a more detailed financial analysis of the quarter.