Thanks, Sam. Good afternoon, everyone, and welcome to our second quarter 2024 earnings call. Here with me is Elaine Birkemeyer, our Chief Financial Officer. I'm pleased to report strong Q2 performance across both our top and bottom lines as well as improvements in our operating cash flow. Specifically, Tactile achieved total revenue of $73.2 million in the second quarter, representing 7% growth year-over-year. By product line, lymphedema revenues increased 8% year-over-year to $64.7 million, and Airway Clearance revenues increased 2% year-over-year to $8.5 million. We delivered strong adjusted EBITDA with over 49% year-over-year increase, reflecting our focus on profitably scaling for our business and operating leverage. From a cash perspective, we increased cash and cash equivalents by $12.9 million in Q2, tipping our cash balance to $73.6 million as of June 30, 2024. Finally, each of our key commercial initiatives for 2024 remain on track. These include: number one, technology and workflow related investments in sales and order operations focused on simplifying and accelerating time to revenue. Number two, development and launch readiness of our next-generation lymphedema platform; and number three, generation of clinical evidence to support patient expansion. I'll expand on each of these shortly, but I'd like to begin with a few high-level remarks. This marks my first earnings call as CEO of Tactile Medical. But before I dive in, I'd first like to congratulate Dan Reuvers on his well-earned retirement and thank him for his measurable impact and meaningful contributions to the company and the patients we've served over the last 4 years. I've had a chance to work closely with Dan as a member of Tactile's Board of Directors since 2021 and his stewardship of the business during the pandemic and through the post pandemic recovery period has been admirable. I'm excited to be in this role and excited about the future for Tactile. The business strengths and opportunities at Tactile are well aligned with my 30-year career in health care at the World Health Organization, Johnson & Johnson and Medtronic. My roles have spanned leadership positions in market access and multiple general management positions. The diversity of these roles and disease states have informed my understanding as a complex care continuum and market access drivers. Fortunately, these are growth opportunities for us at Tactile and they strongly leverage my background. I've spent my first few weeks as CEO, engaging with external stakeholders and meeting with the executive and senior management teams to get a deeper understanding of what's working and where we have opportunities for improvement. This early experience has reinforced my confidence that Tactile is well positioned to transform two very large and very underpenetrated markets with two still woefully underserved patient populations that endure chronic and progressive diseases with life-altering consequences every day. The market foundations are solid. There's a significant unmet need. Our patients experience an unnecessarily protracted and complicated care pathway from diagnosis to treatment options to successful symptom management. There is so much potential to streamline the care journey. The markets are growing. The U.S. market comprises roughly 2 million patients diagnosed with lymphedema. Additionally, there are an estimated 20 million people who are undiagnosed with lymphedema and struggling to receive a diagnosis and timely treatment. Finally, our therapy is underpenetrated. Specifically for pneumatic compression devices, or PCDs, less than 8% of diagnosed patients with lymphedema receive a PCD. Product innovation, clinical programs and market access initiatives will continue to be areas of focus to drive appropriate therapy penetration. A growing market and under penetration within our product category are encouraging fundamentals but it's the patient's unmet needs that drive our sense of urgency. Diagnosed or undiagnosed lymphedema patients include breast, head and neck, pelvic and other cancer treatment survivors. There are also men and women of all ages with chronic venous insufficiency, obesity, trauma and surgery. They experienced significant symptoms of swelling, heaviness and tightness that go beyond cosmetic issues. They face cellulitis, pain, restricted range of motion, limitations on activities of daily living and fibrosis. Especially cruel for head and neck cancer survivors is the difficulty swallowing, speaking and breathing. There is no care for lymphedema and their disease is chronic and progressive. Similar to lymphedema, chronic pulmonary disease also represents a large and underpenetrated market with bronchiectasis being the most common with an estimated 500,000 diagnosed and 4.4 million undiagnosed patients. Bronchiestasis is commonly a misdiagnosis due to the overlap with COPD, and when left untreated, the inability to clear mucus leads to a continuous cycle of infection, inflammation and worsening damage. This status quo is unacceptable to our patients, and it's also unacceptable to us. The potential impact from our therapies on patients across these markets is too substantial, and our path to meaningful growth is not only viable, but it will be our reality. I'm excited to continue advancing our mission at Tactile, and I see the company at a critical juncture, supported by three points. First, we are the demonstrated leader in lymphedema therapy solutions with a portfolio of patient-focused clinically proven pneumatic compression therapy. Second, we are advancing the standard of care for bronchiectasis patients with a differentiated portable offering. And third, we have a cohesive and experienced leadership team and a talented and committed professional sales organization. The time is right to refine our growth and profitability strategy, and I look forward to sharing more specifics with you next quarter. With that context, I'd like to pivot back to a review of our second quarter performance, updates on our key commercial initiatives and where our focus lies for the remainder of 2024. Regarding our product lines, we're pleased to see the growth in year-over-year lymphedema revenue despite a strong prior year comp. As a reminder, we added sales reps late in Q1 of this year, and we expect to see their revenue impact materialize more meaningfully in the second half of the year and beyond. Our legacy reps are increasingly productive due to workflow redesign that aims to reduce non-selling activities such as in-home patient demos. These demos are increasingly performed by our trained patient education consultants. And this quarter, 45% of in-home demos were performed by these consultants versus 35% in Q1 and versus 30% at the end of 2023. We remain committed to our goal of achieving 50% of in-home demos performed by our patient education consultants by the end of 2024. In terms of our overall lymphedema sales headcount, we ended the second quarter with 264 sales representatives versus 269 at the end of the first quarter. While this remains in our target range, we still expect sales headcount in the high 260s to low 270s [ph] as we exit the year. With respect to our sales channel mix in the quarter, our non-Medicare lymphedema business grew nearly 20%, reflecting growth recovery in the VA and progress with our commercial payers. While we continue to improve our first class claims approval for Medicare patients, our Medicare business was down on a year-over-year basis in Q2, which is directly related to the increasingly onerous documentation requirements for Medicare administrators. I'll be speaking in more detail about this after I wrap up the Q2 performance highlights. Turning to a review of our Airway Clearance product line. Since acquiring AffloVest just 2.5 years ago, we doubled the size of the business by taking both share and growing the market. The AffloVest product fits well within our portfolio and ultimately expands our ability to reach and serve more patients with chronic conditions in the home. The product's differentiated portable design, the broad DME channel reach, strong reimbursement, targeted medical education and a tenured sales force are the right pieces for continued growth and profitability. In the second quarter, we were pleased to see Airway Clearance return to growth on a year-over-year basis following the anniversary of the PHE waiver expiration in May. The expiration of this COVID era waiver affected the ordering patterns for one of our larger DME customers and has been a modest headwind to growth. Shipments continued to stabilize in the second quarter for this particular DME, and we anticipate a return to non-PHE ordering patterns. Speaking of ordering patterns, the Airway Clearance business is a bit more sensitive to stocking patterns as compared to our direct lymphedema business. While we expect modest ebbs and flows within the distributor model, our overall expectation for improved performance in the second half of this year remains intact. Our confidence in this view is grounded in a couple of factors, namely that a majority of our DME partners are continuing to grow. In fact, if we exclude the one DME that was the most impacted by the change in PHE, the collective revenue from the other DMEs demonstrates double-digit growth on a year-over-year basis in the second quarter. This continues the trend we saw in the first quarter. We also have several examples of successful DME partner onboarding. For example, a new distributor came online during Q1, and we are already seeing encouraging ordering volumes. We are making the training investments with our DME partners and successfully demonstrating AffloVest as a valuable offering for their large base of patients on oxygen. We expect to see this customer and our other distributor partners continue to grow their AffloVest business as a synergistic product in their portfolio. And finally, our Airway Clearance sales organization consists of a very tenured and highly competent team who excel at educating and training our DME reps in bronchiectasis and the role of AffloVest in their care. We have added reps through Q1 and Q2, and we expect this to help contribute to growth. Before turning to an update on our 2024 key commercial initiatives, I'd like to share more details on our Medicare business and recent changes in Medicare's approach to administering the pneumatic compression pump LCD. This LCD was first established in 2015. And while there have been no additional coverage requirements since then, we are seeing significant changes in the way the MACs are adjudicating claims and increasing their documentation requirements. This increasingly onerous approach to how Medicare administers the LCD ultimately impacts speed and access to treatment for Medicare patients. Earlier this year, we initiated a pilot with an e-prescribing tool, which aims to streamline how we collect and exchange patient medical records with providers during the ordering process. While the change in approach to Medicare documentation was not anticipated, our 2024 tech investment and a flexible e-prescribing tool demonstrates our forward-thinking approach to automating clinical documentation. We are pleased with the early results of our e-prescribing pilot and are advancing broader deployment of the platform later this year with the anticipated impacts to our business beginning more meaningfully in 2025. In addition to expanding our e-prescribing pilot, we'll be working closely with our clinical partners, professional societies, the MACs and CMS directly to advocate for unhindered access for Medicare patients that meet the clinical and LCD requirements for our therapy. While we are strategically and operationally addressing the change in approach to documentation by the MACs, our current assessment of the potential impact on the revenue in the back half of this year leads us to revise our full year 2024 revenue guidance to $293 million to $298 million. As mentioned earlier, the number of patients diagnosed with lymphedema is growing. There is no change to the underlying demand for our lymphedema products, and we have started the implementation of technology to streamline documentation and speed to order processing. As the market leader, we have resources and action plans to help mitigate this recent headwind. As I mentioned in the beginning of our call, there are three 2024 key commercial initiatives that I want to highlight. The first is technology and workflow related investments in sales and order operations. In addition to our e-prescribing tool, we continue to advance other tech investments, which are designed to enhance and simplify the order and reimbursement process as well as the patient and clinician experience. Last quarter, we transitioned to a new more efficient electronic method of verifying patient insurance, which contributes to simplifying our workflow and supporting faster time to order completion. Last quarter, we also shared our investment plan in a new CRM tool and partnerships with leading edge tech companies to introduce AI solutions for sales, marketing, operations and service. We are on track with these initiatives and plan to launch the CRM tool at the end of the year. We are modernizing our business infrastructure and ensuring its design serves our internal operations as well as enhancing the patient and clinical experience. The second key commercial initiative for this year is centers around innovation. Product innovation has been and will continue to be core to our business. And in the second quarter, we reached an important milestone with FDA 510(k) approval of our next-generation lymphedema therapy platform. Platform, which we call Nimbl, remains on track for an early fall 2024 introduction, and we are excited to share a few early details of the product today. Nimbl represents the next generation of our entry-level entre plus pump and was designed specifically to bring an even more friendly consumer experience to our patients. It's small and lightweight, enabling portability when patients are outside of the home. Nimbl also features connectivity to our Kylee digital app, providing patients a way to track their therapy progress at home and share the results with their care team. Nimbl is an exciting addition to our portfolio, and I look forward to sharing additional details on the product and commercial launch next quarter. Finally, from a clinical perspective, we remain very excited about our investments in first-of-its-kind Flexitouch evidence generation. Last quarter, we shared details of the largest lymphedema study in the VA, which was published in the Journal of Vascular Surgery. Today, I'm pleased to share an update on our randomized controlled trial assessing Flexitouch for head and neck lymphedema. This study is the largest randomized clinical trial ever conducted among head and neck lymphedema patients, of which there are over 400,000 oral cavity or pharynx [ph] cancer patients in the U.S. and 90% of these patients are likely to develop lymphedema. We completed enrollment in April 2024 with 235 patients and are wrapping up the 6-month patient follow-up. Once complete, we will analyze the data and communicate results likely in early 2025. These 2024 key initiatives are meeting their milestones and are reflective of our strategy to simplify our business processes and the clinical and patient experience. They also reflect our commitment to new product innovation and clinical evidence. I'm proud of the work that's been done and our employees are excited about them, too. I plan on leveraging my experience to ensure these investments are optimized and our strategies capitalized on our existing commercial momentum and scale. Now I'll turn it over to Elaine for a review of our second quarter financial results in more detail and an update on our 2024 outlook.