Thanks, Kirk, and welcome everyone, to our first quarter 2023 earnings call. We are pleased to announce that Q1 brought solid revenue in census growth and overall financial performance in line with our expectations. Our local leaders and teams drove improvement in our clinical outcomes, reduced turnover and grew admissions and occupancy. Their disciplined approach produced significant progress in an environment with ongoing inflationary headwinds and labor difficulties. Collectively, our Q1 consolidated results reflect revenue of $126.5 million, an increase of $12.6 million or 11% over the prior year quarter and adjusted EBITDA of $7.9 million, an increase of $1.8 million or 28.8% over the prior year quarter. Our unique locally tailored approach resulted in continued growth in each of our primary lines of business, including reaching an all-time high in home health and hospice average daily census and achieving a same-store senior living occupancy of 79.1%, representing a fifth consecutive quarter of occupancy improvement. We are excited about this progress and still see significant opportunities to improve our bottom line financial performance. With the benefit of the positive momentum built over the last several quarters, we remain on track to deliver on our 2023 earnings commitments and we'll get there by focusing on the five key organizational priorities we identified on our most recent call: first, leadership development; second, margin; third, turnover; fourth, growth; and fifth, clinical excellence. Leadership development continues to be our top priority, where I'm personally investing much of my time and attention. We are diligently focused on finding, hiring and developing a robust pipeline of exceptional operational leaders, who can optimize the many exciting growth opportunities that lay before us. Our expanded leadership development team now includes several key field and service center partners who work closely with markets and clusters to find, train and develop future leaders. Specifically, over the next several years, our commitment is to develop 100 local CEOs. To earn the title of CEO, our leaders must not only achieve extraordinary clinical outcomes, culture and growth, but also drive significant financial improvement in their operations. We have found that CEOs typically generate roughly $1 million more in annual earnings than our Executive Directors as well as better clinical and cultural outcomes. To support this local CEO development, we have revamped and reinforced many elements of our leadership training programs for operators and clinical leaders. We have also increased the depth of our leadership pool. Year-to-date, we have appointed seven local CEOs, adding to the 22 existing local CEOs and another 10 C-level leaders. We also hired 11 CEOs and training, with many more in the pipeline. The future of our organization is in good hands and this continued investment will drive our future growth. Value creation and margin improvement remain key operational priorities in 2023. Our local leaders are succeeding in growing revenues in census, but in a macroeconomic cycle of inflation and rising costs, we must be even more disciplined and innovative to ensure that our earnings outpace our revenue growth. We continue our multifaceted approach to optimize our operations and appropriately increase margins. First, our local teams carefully measure and manage utilization and staff productivity. Second, our teams diligently monitor payor mix to balance reimbursement with our commitment to be a solution to the needs of our communities. Finally, based on our strategy of acquiring and turning around underperforming operations, we continue to strengthen our transition process to ensure that our newer operations become accretive more quickly. Our standard for new operations is that they contribute meaningfully to earnings no later than the ninth quarter post-acquisition. As an example, in early 2021, we acquired home health operations in Phoenix and Tucson, Arizona. The first four quarters post-acquisition were foundation-building quarters, reinforcing culture, operational and clinical leadership teams and community relationships. Over those four quarters, revenue increased to 48% and earnings increased 13% year-over-year. In Q1 of 2023, the ninth quarter since the acquisition, these operations are now high performers with a 135% increase in revenue and a 200% increase in earnings since the acquisition. Their clinical performance is also impressive with star ratings consistently between 4 and 4.5 stars. We've made progress in our employee turnover and are committed to being the Employer of Choice in each community we serve. We are leveraging our unique operating model to reduce turnover and improve employee satisfaction. We share turnover scorecards broadly, create accountability and empower our clusters and individual operators to drive improvement. We're achieving encouraging reductions in turnover in both segments experiencing double-digit year-over-year improvement with the greatest impact realized in our senior living business. Turning to growth. Our acquisition and growth strategy follows several core principles. First, we don't grow for growth's sake. Rather, we grow to provide meaningful opportunities for local leaders and communities, which leads to greater value creation for shareholders. Second, we invest where we have strength, strong leaders ready to step in and establish operations to serve and support as cluster partners. Third, we are disciplined in our valuation approach and seek to make opportunistic investments with significant long-term upside value. We will continue to invest consistently in home health and hospice through multiple avenues. These include traditional acquisitions, operational expansions such as branch expansions, strategic partnerships and start-up operations. This multipronged approach provides flexibility to expand and create opportunities for our developing leaders through changing economic cycles. We also plan to invest strategically in senior living, where we can quickly turn operations and create value. Senior living deals may be attractive based on a number of factors, including favorable lease terms and strong relationships with landlord partners such as Ensign, CareTrust and others. We believe value-generating real estate acquisitions are on the horizon, and we will be disciplined yet opportunistic in pursuing these opportunities. As we look to the future, we see significant potential to invest in both segments and create long-term shareholder value through the post-acute care continuum. With that, I'll turn the call over to John to provide more detail on our first quarter operational results.