Thanks, Tim and good morning, everyone. We are encouraged by the continued return in core demand for healthcare services, the progress from our ongoing investments and further reductions in contract labor as well as the early evidence of success in Project Empower and our physician in-sourcing initiative. Moving on to quarterly financial results. Net operating revenues were $3.1 billion, representing a 2% year-over-year growth on a consolidated basis. On a same-store basis, net revenue increased 5.1% over the third quarter of 2022, driven by a 4.2% growth in adjusted admissions and a 0.9% increase in net revenue per adjusted admission. Commercial mix was flat sequentially at 47.9% of total net revenue, while Medicare Advantage was down 60 basis points from the second quarter. Commercial volume grew faster than the company average from the second quarter as expected. However, growth in medical admits outpaced surgical admits as Tim noted. Adjusted EBITDA was $360 million, representing 11.7% margin. When excluding the $115 million of benefit from provider relief funds from third quarter 2022 results, margin was up more than 200 basis points year-over-year and declined only 30 basis points sequentially as CHS stepped over the typical third quarter seasonal pressures on profitability. We were very pleased to deliver strong labor cost management as strong nurse recruitment and retention helped us outperform expectations and driving down the contract labor expense, which was $54 million, improving sequentially from $72 million and versus our previous expectation for $60 million to $70 million exiting the year. Our average hourly rate for contract labor also improved 10% sequentially. Additionally, overall wage inflation came in slightly better than expected, up approximately 3% year-over-year versus our forecasted 5% for the full year. Medical specialist fees as reported in other OpEx line, increased slightly from the second quarter, which included a gross up of expenses for physicians in-sourced from the former APP contract. When factoring in the net revenue associated with in-sourcing those physicians, we estimate we benefited by approximately $4 million sequentially compared to the subsidy payments previously paid to APP. As Tim noted, the progress with our in-sourcing initiative has been very encouraging and we expect further improvement in the coming quarters as we scale this effort. Moving on to the cash flow statement. Cash flows from operations were $29 million compared with $137 million in the third quarter of 2022. The cash performance was temporarily affected by more than $100 million in various items that should reverse in the fourth quarter. Most notably, billing delays related to clinical system upgrades in two of our markets and our physician in-sourcing initiative as we work to get certain providers credentialed under our network agreements. Importantly, these have been successfully completed and related claims are being submitted. So we expect to begin receiving these payments in the fourth quarter. Capital expenditures for the quarter were $130 million, and for the first nine months were $357 million, on track with our guidance of $450 million to $500 million. We continue to expect significant improvement in free cash flow performance in the fourth quarter as is typical. However, in light of the performance to-date and the current legislative environment, we are updating our guidance for operating cash flows to $400 million to $450 million. Net debt to trailing adjusted EBITDA at the quarter end was 8 times and with $91 million of cash and equivalents on hand, and approximately $680 million of borrowing capacity under our ABL, we remain well positioned from a liquidity standpoint to meet our needs going forward. Additionally, we continue to expect proceeds from the planned divestiture of the Bravera Health assets in Western Florida to be used primarily to pay down debt. We continue to receive inbound interests in certain of our assets, and we will consider the transaction when it makes financial and strategic sense as we recycle capital towards achieving higher returns with lower risk, including debt reduction, capacity and service line expansions and potentially select acquisitions in certain key markets. Project Empower, our enterprise-wide modernization and optimization initiatives kicked off October 1st, and we are very pleased with the early results. As part of our first wave of deployments, we have implemented our new workflows and the Oracle Supply Chain and finance functionality at 15 of our facilities and have stood up our shared services with no disruption in patient care. We are increasingly confident in the business case for Project Empower and believe that the significantly improved visibility and insights will reveal opportunities within CHS’s markets and business lines from which our operators can capitalize upon to drive further shareholder value. We look forward to providing you further updates as we press forward with Project Empower in the coming months and quarters. As we noted in last night’s press release, we are updating the guidance range for 2023. Specifically, we now anticipate net operating revenues of $12.4 billion to $12.5 billion and adjusted EBITDA of $1.45 billion to $1.5 billion. We remain confident in our three to five-year targets in the longer-term opportunities in our markets and our continued volume growth and recovery gives us reason for optimism heading into the fourth quarter. However, we believe this update is prudent with just one quarter remaining in the year. With that, I’ll turn the call back over to the operator to poll for questions.