Thanks, Scott. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us to review our operational and financial results for the second quarter of 2023. We are pleased with our second quarter. We noted in our year-end earnings call and reiterated at our Investor Day in June, our quarterly results for 2023 would be uneven given the timing uncertainties associated with our transformation plan, which included some of the transactions we announced just prior to our Investor Day. The demand for our products remain strong, and although supply chain disruptions have lessened, we continue to experience ongoing product supply challenges and the effects of inflation throughout our supply chain. Coming into the year, we anticipated that 2023 will continue to present supply chain headwinds and pockets of product availability challenges, but that many of these headwinds would ease as we reached the back half of the year. We still believe this to be the case with our anticipated year-end back order levels to be around $3 million, down from over $10 million at the beginning of the year. As always, our primary focus is on getting patients back to the things that matter as we meet the needs of our customers. For the quarter, we achieved sales of $169 million from continuing operations or down approximately 1% compared to last year. Excluding both the negative impact of foreign exchange and the $5 million impact related to our previously announced decision to eliminate revenue that was not meeting our returns criteria, organic growth was favorable 2.6% from quarter. We also generated $0.24 of adjusted diluted earnings per share and almost $23 million of adjusted EBITDA from continuing operations during the quarter. While our adjusted gross margin was almost 60% and our SG&A as a percentage of revenue was 45.1%. Actual sales for the quarter, inclusive of our respiratory health business was $200 million or 2.5% growth. Also excluding the adjusted revenue items I just referenced. SG&A as a percentage of revenue was 40%, supporting an adjusted EBITDA margin of almost 16% for the quarter. Now I'll spend the next few minutes discussing our results at the product category level. On a constant currency basis, our Digestive Health portfolio grew almost 17% bolstered by our med product line, which posted another strong quarter versus the prior year as we continue to take advantage of the demand for NFI conversions in North America. Our legacy intra-feeding product line grew double digits globally, primarily driven by the continued expansion of our U.S. CORTRAK standard of care offering. As noted during Investor Day, we continue to deliver above-market growth and leadership in our core digestive health markets and are poised to sustain this momentum through innovations that we plan to launch over the next 12 months. Expansion into high potential global markets and actual M&A targets in large, attractive adjacencies. Turning to our pain management and recovery portfolio. Actual reported sales were down close to 11% for the quarter, with soft results across our interventional pain, game ready and 5-shot HA product categories each of which were down at least 5% versus the prior year. Separately, our surgical pain pump business was flat for the quarter, excluding the negative impact of foreign exchange and low growth, low-margin products we are no longer selling in this category. As I shared earlier, we continue to experience supply headwinds within these businesses, although we expect these headwinds to ease during the second half of this year. Alleviating these supply chain challenges is critical to supporting our pain management and recovery portfolio sales lift in the second half of the year. Finally, our HA portfolio experienced a weaker-than-expected first half. However, this softness was primarily concentrated in our 5-shot or GenVisc products. 5-shot market has specific pricing and competitive dynamics that are not as prevalent within the 3-shot market. TriVisc, our 3-shot offering continues to align with our overarching orthopedic call point strategy and is largely meeting our internal performance expectations. We expect volatility will continue to be a factor in both of these HA markets for the next several quarters as we face strong 2022 comparables and continue to experience the related swings from entering the ASP reporting environment in Q3 2022. Despite this volatility, we believe we have the right strategies in place to capitalize on our HA opportunities. Our pain management and recovery business results have not met our expectations over the last year. However, we are confident in our new strategy outlined during Investor Day. This strategy connects our pain brands across the patient life cycle and sets the stage for sustainable mid-single-digit growth as we enter 2024 and with gross margins exceeding 60%. Our investments in the pain management and recovery business will be very selective over the short to midterm as we focus on securing consistent organic financial results. Now moving to an update on our 2023 priorities and transformation efforts, which includes some of the initiatives that I just described. As we originally outlined in the beginning of the year and further highlighted in June during Investor Day, we have 4 key priorities for the next 3 years that will optimize our go-to-market opportunities and meaningfully enhance our financial profile. These priorities include strategically and commercially optimizing our organization, transforming our portfolio to focus on categories where we have attractive margin profiles and the right to win, taking additional cost management measures to enhance operating profitability and continuing our path of efficient capital allocation to meaningfully improve our ROIC. We continue to execute well against these priorities as evidenced by our recent divestiture and acquisition activity, implementation of our new go-to-market strategy for our pain management and recovery business, margin improvement additional portfolio optimization decisions and delivery on our transformation program expense savings. In addition, our Board has recently approved a $25 million share repurchase program. This will not impact our ability to continue to execute our tuck-in acquisition strategy, but rather provides us flexibility to allocate capital towards repurchasing shares that we believe are meaningfully undervalued versus our internally calculated intrinsic value. Finally, I'd like to thank everyone who participated in our Investor Day on June 20 and the subsequent feedback we received from many of you. Now I'll turn the call over to Michael, who continues to lead these efforts in his expanded role as Chief Transformation Officer and will further discuss our second quarter financial results.