Thank you, Dave, and good morning. We appreciate everyone joining the call and webcast. During our third quarter call, we committed to taking swift and decisive action to address certain industry challenges that has intensified. The initiatives were designed to strengthen our operating model and better position the company for long-term earnings growth. I'm pleased to share that our fourth quarter results reflected a number of positive developments and encouraging signs of progress as a result of the actions we took since our last update. Key industry headwinds that we flagged as accelerating on the third quarter call, including professional fees and other rate pressures driven by payer denials showed stability in 4Q. Additionally, our team focus on disciplined execution and expense optimization is already starting to pay dividends and drove solid fourth quarter earnings performance. Furthermore, we generated robust cash flow that was above our expectations resulting in nearly a 50% increase in full year 2025 operating cash flow. In short, I'm pleased with our finish to 2025 and the momentum that we've built exiting the year. Importantly, we expect operating performance traction to further ramp throughout 2026. During today's conversation, I'm going to focus my comments on 3 key areas: First, I'll walk you through fourth quarter performance, which resulted in 2025, recording our highest ever revenue, EBITDA and operating cash flow. Second, I will provide color on our IMPACT program, our work to improve margins, performance, agility and care transformation and how those actions are strengthening our business, along with an update on industry challenges we highlighted last quarter. And third, I will share context around our 2026 financial guidance. Let's start with fourth quarter performance in 2025 results. We reported solid fourth quarter revenue supported by durable industry demand. This capped off a strong 2025, where we grew full year revenue by 6% at $6.3 billion, squarely in the middle of our 2025 guidance range. Underpinning this performance was strong 2025 admissions and adjusted admissions growth of 5.3% and 2.3%, respectively. Fourth quarter adjusted EBITDA benefited from the impact program initiatives to optimize revenue and streamline the business. For full year 2025, we grew adjusted EBITDA 9% and expanded margin 20 basis points. We also generated significant operating cash flow of $223 million in 4Q and $471 million during 2025, up 49% from 2024. Our improving earnings profile, along with diligent work to maximize collections contributed to the large increase. Finally, we strengthened our balance sheet during the year. We increased cash by approximately $150 million to over $700 million at the end of 2025, and we reduced our lease adjusted net leverage nearly 0.5 turn to 2.5x. That's a good segue into the second topic of today's discussion, our IMPACT program progress and an update on industry challenges. We are pleased with the traction of IMPACT-driven initiatives to further optimize costs and strengthen margins. During the third quarter call, we sized $40 million of annualized IMPACT program savings that we expected would ramp during the fourth quarter of 2025 and reached run rate entering 2026. We are on track to deliver on that target and are raising the expected contribution to approximately $55 million, which Alfred will discuss shortly. Importantly, IMPACT is a multiyear operating model transformation, improving not only margins, but our performance agility and care transformation. These efforts are reflected in the P&L. For example, we activated precision staffing initiatives that resulted in fourth quarter a salaried wages and benefit expenses declining 0.4% year-over-year. Similarly, we reduced SWB per adjusted admission by 2%, which is a significant inflection from the 4% growth during the first 3 quarters of 2025. Within SWB, we reduced contract labor expenses by 26% to $17 million in the fourth quarter. To put that into context, contract labor accounted for only 2.6% of SWB in 4Q, which is the lowest it's been since 2019 when we were running in the mid-2% range. These improvements are being driven by focused efforts to optimize precision staffing, drive operating room excellence and expand virtual care. In contract labor, we renegotiated a key contract to improve our rates and we reduced overall utilization by accelerating our speed to hire and leveraging real-time management tools. This enabled us to reduce agency labor FTEs by approximately 175 in the last 4 months of 2025. In the operating room, which is 1 of our highest impact areas for improving performance, we increased first case on time starts by over 10 percentage points in 4Q versus 3Q and expect to continue on that progress this year. Additionally, we continue to see significant value and care transformation through our virtual care activities, including virtual nursing, patient monitoring and provider coverage. As we have shared previously, these programs have improved workflows, ease staffing pressures and strength in clinical support across our hospitals. Building on this success, we announced a partnership with last week to launch an enterprise-wide AI-assisted virtual care expansion that will span more than 2,000 patient rooms by year-end. This will establish a connected, scalable virtual care network across all markets, improving safety, operational efficiency and enabling better utilization of clinical talent. Stepping back, I'm encouraged by the traction of our IMPACT program built throughout 4Q and the momentum it provides heading into 2026 as we manage well-known industry pressures. On that front, I wanted to provide a brief update on the 2 pressure points we experienced in the third quarter. Payer denials in 4Q held generally consistent with 3Q, and we are starting to see some improvements on the margin aided by our partnership with Ensemble. Specifically, we've been focused on denial integrity and more consistent application of our contractual tools yielding better predictability in the revenue cycle. Likewise, professional fees also moderated in Q4 with growth decelerating to 8% from 11% in Q3. Our strategic recontracting and vendor transitions are having a positive impact. While it's still early, the 4Q data points are directionally favorable on both industry challenges. Pivoting to our third discussion point, I want to address our 2026 outlook. We entered this year encouraged by tangible progress from our IMPACT program and expect to continue building momentum throughout the year. We remain highly focused on optimizing revenue, disciplined expense management and productivity, the levers most within our control, all while delivering excellent quality care to patients. In terms of industry demand, our positioning remains a strong cornerstone as our markets continue to grow 2x to 3x faster than the national average and are further bolstered by rising care complexity. These structural trends reinforce our long-term growth thesis, while we continue to overcome the impact of well-known industry headwinds. With that backdrop, we are issuing 2026 adjusted EBITDA guidance of $485 million to $535 million. As Alfred will detail, this reflects tailwinds of mid-single-digit core earnings growth and IMPACT program savings, we now estimate will contribute about $55 million in 2026 at the midpoint, up from our $40 million estimate. Those benefits will largely help offset headwinds that include a prudent estimate for potential exchange disruption. We believe this is an appropriate posture to start the year given the broader market uncertainties Importantly, we expect adjusted EBITDA to return to growth in 2027 after lapping this year's annualization of payer denial and professional fee headwinds and as IMPACT program savings build through 2026. Before turning the call over to Alfred, I want to underscore that the deployment of AI and other technology continues to be an important part of Ardent's transformation strategy. We've taken a progressive disciplined approach to building the infrastructure required to deploy these tools at scale and that foundation is enabling us to advance additional initiatives this year. The takeaway is simple. Our single instance of Epic and enterprise-wide technology foundation gives us a structural efficiency advantage that continues to widen over time. We are seeing tangible benefits in coding accuracy, labor efficiency clinical throughput and quality. As for Ardent, you heard earlier that we are expanding AI-assisted virtual care across the full enterprise in 2026, supporting a virtual first approach that improves access, streamlined care delivery and extends the operating efficiencies already demonstrated in several markets. Our AI-enhanced scribe technology reduces clinical documentation time by 35% for physicians, enhances documentation quality and supports appropriate revenue capture. Adoption continues to grow, with Ardent providers now using the AI scribe in approximately 85% of patient visits without double the industry average. Additionally, we continue to deploy medical wearables that enable continuous vital sign monitoring. In markets where we implemented, this technology has reduced mortality by up to 15% and shortened length of stay by approximately 1/3 of a day. Finally, we are leveraging technology to support both clinical staff and operating room scheduling. This provides frontline leaders with real-time insights into staffing patterns and surgeons access to pull forward cases to maximize our operating room utilization. And importantly, our single instance of Epic remains a core differentiator standardizing and optimizing workflows, enhancing provider scheduling and consistently delivering strong clinical outcomes, including top quartile performance. Collectively, these tools have and will continue to make Ardent more efficient and enable us to deliver best-in-class patient care and quality. With that, I'll turn it over to Alfred to provide more detail on our fourth quarter financial performance and outlook.