Thanks, Jason, and good morning. From a financial perspective, we continued our momentum in Q2 with outstanding results from the Pharma segment, strong performance from the businesses included in other and continued operational progress in GMPD. We grew operating earnings by 9% while overcoming the headwinds of the prior customer contract expiration and the as anticipated COVID-19 seasonal timing. In summary, we had a lot going on, and we are pleased to report that the profit growth across the business resulted in a much better-than-expected EPS of $1.93. We are raising our EPS guidance to a range of $7.85 to $8. Let's review the results, starting with Slide 4. Total company revenue decreased 4% to $55 billion on a reported basis. Adjusting for the contract expiration, revenue increased 16% versus the prior year, primarily reflecting strong demand across pharma and all three of the businesses included in other. Total company gross margin increased 5% with contributions from all of our operating segments. As you can see from the financials, our team continued to control our costs across the enterprise with SG&A increasing a modest 3%, covering the impact of rising healthcare costs, the ION acquisition and investments against the businesses. This led to operating earnings growth of 9% versus the prior year. Moving below the line, interest and other increased $45 million to $38 million, primarily driven by financing impacts related to the recent acquisitions, including the Q2 proactive debt issuance. Our second quarter effective tax rate finished at 21.4%, flat to our rate a year ago. Q2 average diluted shares outstanding were 243 million shares, 1% lower than a year ago due to our previous share repurchases. The net result for Q2 was EPS of $1.93, growth of 2%. Now turning to the segments, beginning with Pharmaceutical and Specialty solutions on Slide 5. Second quarter revenue decreased 4% to $51 billion due to the impact of the customer transition. Excluding that, revenue increased 17% driven by brand and specialty sales growth from existing and new customers. This included approximately 6.5 percentage points of revenue growth from GLP-1 sales. As we indicated at a recent industry conference during Q2 we saw strong pharmaceutical demand across our business in brand, specialty, consumer health and generics and from our largest customers. The team delivered segment profit of $531 million in the second quarter, an increase of 7%, driven by growth from biopharma solutions, including contributions from specialty networks, and a higher contribution from brand and specialty products, only partially offset by the customer contract expiration. In Specialty, we saw strong performance across specialty distribution. We also continue to be pleased with the progress of integrating specialty networks, which is benefiting our overall specialty strategy and tracking consistent with our original expectations. As expected, the distribution of COVID-19 vaccines was a headwind in the quarter as we compare to last year's peak during Q2. We do not expect a meaningful contribution from COVID-19 vaccines for the remainder of the fiscal year. Our generics program continued to see positive performance, including strong volume growth and consistent market dynamics. Operationally, our large customer onboardings and expansions are in progress. While each customer's needs are unique and timelines vary, we are pleased with the performance of our pharma business and how that business has prepared for the future. Let's turn now to our turnaround business, the GMPD segment, which continues to advance the GMPD Improvement Plan. Revenue increased 1% in Q2 to $3.2 billion, driven by volume growth from existing customers. As previewed earlier this month, volume growth was less than we expected, in part driven by softness with respiratory products in our lab business. GMPD segment profit increased to $18 million, slightly below our initial expectations for the quarter, reflecting the softer volumes I just referenced and an unanticipated $15 million impact in our WaveMark business, largely from the write-off of uncollectible receivables. While we were disappointed with the WaveMark adjustments this quarter, the business model is resonating with customers as they continue to realize substantial benefit from the products and value-creating services we provide. On the positive side, it should be noted that the GMPD team managed to mostly offset the shortfall to expectations in the quarter with aggressive SG&A management and a better-than-expected impact from our cost optimization initiatives, finishing with the businesses reported in other, as seen on Slide 7. Second quarter revenue increased 13% to $1.3 billion due to the growth across all three businesses, at-Home Solutions, Nuclear and Precision Health Solutions and OptiFreight Logistics. The businesses collectively grew segment profit in the quarter by 11%, driven by OptiFreight and Nuclear. I'm especially pleased with our nuclear business managed through the Moly-99 shortage astutely and posted better-than-expected results. We are looking forward to talking about at-Home's progress against its automation and efficiency efforts in future quarters. Now turning to the balance sheet. We ended the quarter with a cash position of $3.8 billion, which included $2.8 billion, which was used today to close the acquisition of 73% of GI Alliance Adjusted free cash flow, was a use of approximately $250 million for the quarter, primarily reflecting unfavorable quarter and day-of-the-week timing. During the second quarter, we continued to deploy capital according to our disciplined capital allocation framework. We invested nearly $100 million in CapEx back into the businesses, to drive organic growth. We returned approximately $125 million to shareholders through dividends, and we closed on the ION acquisition, and obtained the financing that we're using to complete the GIA acquisition today. Now let's turn our gaze forward, some context notes before we begin. We have reached the midyear point, and are now focused on the back half on significant customer onboarding and expansions. A third element of our large customer non-renewal mitigation plans. We've closed our acquisitions of ION and GI Alliance, and early positive views of those businesses, are incorporated into today's updated guidance. We do not yet have visibility to a closing date on ADSG, given customary closing conditions, so we'll wait to incorporate ADSG into our guidance until after closing. Together, ION and GIA, while positive profit generators, are not meaningful to our fiscal '25 EPS, given the partial remaining year, the increased interest expense to fund the transactions, and the timing of our investments and synergy achievement plans. We will provide more details beyond this fiscal year when providing fiscal year 2026 guidance on future calls. With that out of the way, let's talk about our updated fiscal '25 guidance. After another strong quarter, we are raising our fiscal '25 EPS guidance, to a range of $7.85 to $8, a $0.10 increase at the midpoint from our prior guidance of $7.75 to $7.90. This is primarily driven, by strong growth in the Pharma segment offset GMPD and higher interest costs. Reflecting our acquisitions, interest and Other is increased to a range of $200 million to $230 million driven by the new debt financing and foregone interest income. Moving on to our segments, starting on Slide 10. For Pharma, we are improving our revenue outlook to a decline of 1% to 3%, reflecting the addition of GI Alliance and ION into our guidance, and the strong year-to-date utilization we've seen. Normalizing for the customer transition and our acquisitions, fiscal '25 revenue growth at the midpoint, would now be approximately 20%. For segment profit, we are raising our Pharma segment profit guidance for the full year, to 10% to 12% growth. Excluding the contributions of GIA and ION, this would equate to high single-digit underlying segment profit growth. You should note that GIA, holds meaningful minority equity positions in many of the ambulatory surgical centers in, which their procedures are conducted. The ASC tied profit streams in GIA, will not show up in our Pharma segment, but will rather show up at a positive item in IMO’s other income. For reference, we expect about $15 million of other income coming from GIA's equity method investments in fiscal '25. Regarding Pharma's cadence, we continue to expect significant incremental volume over the back half of the year, from new customer wins and expansions. And we also continue to expect Q3, to be the highest profit dollar quarter of the year, driven by the timing of manufacturer price increases, which have traded generally consistent with our expectations. For GMPD, our revenue outlook remains unchanged at 2% to 4% growth, which is also what we now expect for Cardinal brand revenue growth. As we think about the GMPD Improvement Plan, and the efforts I referenced earlier, while we are pleased with the progress the team is making, the efforts do take time. For the rest of this year, we recognized the impact of the healthcare costs, the WaveMark write-off, and the Q2 soft volume headwinds that we have experienced. As a result, we are adjusting our GMPD guidance on segment profit, to be in the $130 million to $150 million range, still a significant improvement from last year. As I have commented before, we continue to expect improvements in profit in the back half of the year, with Q4 being the high point of the fiscal year, similar to last year. We are not providing an update, to our fiscal '26 our long-term profit guide on GMPD today. While our financial objectives are clear, we are scrutinizing volume trends, and the current highly fluid tariff environment in Mexico and the United States. And we are awaiting clarity, on whether there will be industry-wide dislocations or exceptions, which may present both risks and opportunities for us. This is a highly fluid situation. The one certainty is that our GMPD team, continues to aggressively work to improve our business. In Other, we are reiterating our expectations for 10% to 12% revenue growth, and approximately 10% segment profit. One note on Other's cadence. We expect stronger year-over-year profit growth in Q4 than in Q3, due to the timing of our growth-oriented technology investments and associated benefits. Before I wrap up, a couple of comments on capital deployment. We remain committed to creating continued shareholder value over the long-term. Nothing is changing regarding our disciplined capital allocation strategy, invest in the business, protect our investment-grade rating, return a baseline of capital and assess additional M&A, and return of capital opportunities. Following the closures of our deals, we will take a disciplined approach, to paying down debt. We anticipate retaining our BBB, Baa2 investment-grade rating, by quickly getting back within Moody's post yield updated targeted leverage range for us, of 2.75 times to 3.25 times adjusted debt to EBITDA. We will also execute on our previously committed fiscal year '25, additional share repurchases of $375 million. As for M&A, we are focused on executing against the integration, and improvement plans that surround the acquisitions, we have announced in the last year. We will continue to evaluate high-quality assets in strategic areas of importance, but we'll focus on integration and tuck-in acquisitions, to the multi-specialty and oncology platforms that we have just acquired. To close, Cardinal Health continues to benefit from our disciplined focus on our core, while also making important investments, securing our growth for the long-term. Our shareholder value creation efforts expand our enterprise, in both the progress to-date and the road map, of what we have in front of us, gives Jason and I confidence to raise our guidance again, for the remainder of this year. We look forward, to updating you on this in coming months. With that, I will turn it back over to Jason.