Thanks, Brent. I’m pleased to report strong performance across both operating segments in the first quarter. Our focus on leadership has allowed us to pair robust organic growth with the effective transition of newly acquired operations, leading to exceptional financial and clinical results. Our Home Health and Hospice segment delivered another record-setting quarter. In Q1, segment revenue reached $159.9 million, up $43.4 million, or 37.2%, and adjusted EBITDA rose to $25.1 million, an increase of $7.3 million, or 40.6%, each over the prior year quarter. We also remain steadily focused on improved clinical outcomes and strong cost discipline at the local level, resulting in an adjusted EBITDA margin of 15.8%, a 10 basis point improvement, even as we experienced rapid growth and significant acquisition activity. The growth in our hospice programs reflected this momentum. Hospice admissions rose to 3,783, an increase of 22.8%, and average daily census climbed to 3,794, up 28.1% each over the prior year quarter. Organic growth was a key contributor to this improvement, as length of stay increased and same-store average daily census rose 10.4% over the prior year quarter. Among other drivers, these results reflect our ongoing investment in developing geriatric primary care, palliative care, and specialty clinical care programs in several of our communities. These locally-led programs, supported by our provider services resource team, are designed to address critical gaps in local care continuums and ensure that patients receive the right care in the right setting at the right time to improve clinical outcomes and patient satisfaction. In many cases, these provider-driven programs have helped us open new doors and expand referrals across the care continuum. The proposed 2026 hospice rule released last month includes a 2.4% rate increase. Based on our initial modeling, we expect to receive a similar 2.42% upward adjustment, which is consistent with our previously released guidance. Our Home Health segment continues to be a pillar of strength. Total admissions grew to 18,878, an increase of 4,229, or 28.9%. Medicare admissions rose 19.7% and Medicare revenue per episode increased by 9.3%, each over the prior year quarter. Strong transitions, including those at Signature and Muir Home Health helped drive this outsized growth, along with continued performance at our same-store operations, where we saw admissions increase 12.2%, Medicare admissions increase 5%, and Medicare revenue per episode increase 5.9%, each over the prior year quarter. Clinical quality continued to set our home health operations apart with a CMS reported average star rating of 4.1, significantly above the industry average of 3 stars and a potentially preventable hospitalization rate of just 8.7%, well below the industry average of 10%. Our senior living business continues to gather steam as our flywheel of operational improvement, coupled with opportunistic acquisitions, picks up speed. We continue to methodically expand and deepen our bench of entrepreneurial leaders, and we are seeing progress resulting from these efforts. Senior Living segment revenue of $50 million increased by $9.5 million, or 23.6% over the prior year quarter; adjusted EBITDA of $4.9 million increased by $1.4 million, or 40.8%; and segment adjusted EBITDA margin increased to 9.9%, a 120 basis point improvement over the prior year quarter. Over the same period, occupancy was essentially flat as we intentionally focused on capturing high-quality revenue, leading revenue per occupied room to increase 11.3% over the prior year quarter. While our senior living performance is solid, we also see significant latent potential that we can unlock as we improve occupancy and margin. Turning to growth. As Brent mentioned and as we discussed on our prior earnings call, on January 1, we completed the acquisition of Signature Healthcare, bringing the Oregon operations into our portfolio. As we expected, Signature has been an excellent fit with Pennant. And operationally and clinically, we have made significant progress since acquisition, including completing the transition to our systems and instance of Homecare Homebase. This transition was driven by our local Northwest portfolio companies with significant support from our exceptional Service Center. The early success in retaining leaders, employees and patients reflects our ability to successfully acquire and transition multistate, multisite operations to our unique operating model. Also mentioned on our prior earnings call, on February 1, 2025, we announced that we acquired through long-term triple-net leases senior living operations in Nampa, Idaho; Kerrville, Texas; and Palmview, Texas. These two are off to a great start. On April 1, 2025, we announced our acquisition of The Villages at Red Mountain Senior Living in Mesa, Arizona, adding 128 units in this key state. In addition to the operations, Pennant purchased the underlying real estate. Red Mountain had underperformed under prior ownership and been placed in the state receivership, allowing us to purchase this relatively new and attractive facility for a favorable price and become a solution for the receiver, the residents, and the local community. This acquisition highlights our ability to navigate unique transitions and unlock significant value in complex circumstances. Finally, on May 1, 2025, we issued an 8-K related to our agreement with UnitedHealth Group and Amedisys to acquire certain assets connected to their planned transaction. This opportunity remains subject to the closing of United and Amedisys’ broader transaction and other customary closing conditions. We will disclose additional information related to this transaction as the process unfolds. Beyond the UnitedHealth-Amedisys deal, we continue to evaluate a strong pipeline of acquisition opportunities in both segments. As always, we will approach these opportunities with discipline, pursuing only those we believe we have the leadership capacity and operational strength to support. With that, I’ll turn it over to Lynette for a review of the financials. Lynette?