Good morning, and thanks for joining us. Quarter 2 2024 marks our third sequential quarter demonstrating the success of our strategies. Our team deserves great praise for keeping a strong focus on operational performance amidst many potential distractions, and the results we share with you today are a testament to the tremendous job they've done. I'm extremely proud to lead such a dedicated group of professionals. I also want to acknowledge the opportunity we've had over the past couple of months to discuss our strategies with many of our stockholders and the valuable feedback we have received those discussions. Before we discuss quarter two results, I want to comment on the proposed 2025 home health payment rule. CMS is proposing a permanent adjustment of negative 4.06%, resulting in a net decrease of 1.7%. Based on our current home health patient mix, our estimated impact is negative 1.05%. The home health community is united behind PDGM legislation, the Preserving Access to Home Health Act, which would prevent CMS from making any further permanent cuts or temporary cuts. NAHC, the National Association for Home Care and Hospice, and PQHH, the Partnership for Quality Home Healthcare, have continued to work with our congressional allies to streamline the focus of the bill and draft offsets that would provide pay-fors. We understand that important committee stakeholders are working to score the legislation and pay-fors. We remain actively engaged with our trade associations and the industry on these advocacy efforts. Let's move now to our progress on our key strategies and how they continue to produce positive results. In our Home Health segment, 6.4% total admission growth was driven by our payer innovation strategy, and our focus on improved utilization of clinical resources. Our payer innovation strategy continues to succeed, with our field teams successfully shifting admissions out of historically lower-paying contracts to better paying contracts that recognize our better way to care. In quarter one of 2023, only 6% of non-Medicare visits were in payer innovation contracts. That rate grew to 43% in quarter 2 2024. This shift into payer innovation contracts is driving an increase in non-Medicare revenue per visit, and equally as important, demonstrates our commitment to relationships with payers who understand the value of our care. Looking back at 2022, that rate approximated $136 per visit. In 2024, it has grown to $147 per visit. As we look to the future, the quickest way to get the majority of our non-Medicare business to the payer innovation contracts, is to continue to focus on referrals within the payer innovation contracts, negotiate improved rates with non-payer innovation contracts, and when necessary, terminate the lower reimbursing contracts. After over nine months of unsuccessful negotiations with UnitedHealthcare, we submitted our termination notice on August 1st. We will dedicate our clinical resources to fee-for-service Medicare patients, and those that are members of the 68 favorable contracts. We remain committed to providing our strong quality of care to UnitedHealthcare members if at some point they decide to contract with acceptable rates. In quarter one of 2023, 58% of admissions were in combined Medicare fee-for-service and payer innovation contracts. That left 42% of admissions in unfavorable contracts. In 2024, the percent of admissions in Medicare fee-for-service and payer innovation contracts has grown to 71%. This will continue to accelerate with this recent decision to terminate this national agreement. In regards to Medicare fee-for-service, we still have work to do. However, our strategy is working, as one third of our branches experienced year-over-year fee-for-service Medicare admission growth in quarter two. We have done a deep dive into the branch-level data to identify the branches that are successfully implementing our strategies and those that are not. We're using this analysis and the identified best practices to make meaningful changes across the company, that we believe will result in overall stabilization of fee-for-service Medicare business, and we've established a project team to concentrate on retaining fee-for-service business. Additionally, our scale and density within key markets, along with our reputation for strong clinical outcomes, continues to attract opportunities to collaborate with both legacy and new accountable care organization operators. ACOs offer an opportunity to serve Medicare fee-for-service members and often to be recognized for outstanding clinical performance via value-based quality incentives. We are grateful for both our legacy and new ACO relationships. We are encouraged to see the growth and maturity of ACO reach organizations, and we're equally excited about opportunities in the new guide and team models from CMS. Growth has also been fueled by increasing the utilization of existing clinical staff through our technology. Creating the just-right care plan through our Medalogix Pulse tool, resulted in visits per episode of 14.0, 3.8% lower than last year. Lowering visits per episode increases revenue per visit, and with the majority of our clinicians in a salaried position, increases clinical capacity for growth. Turning now to the Hospice segment, we continue to make steady progress in growing our census, and we are pleased that the average daily census has increased sequentially each month since January 2024. In addition to the implementation of the case management model, which eliminated staffing constraints in contract labor, we also implemented a centralized admissions department to support each of our hospice sub regions that allows for more efficient processing of referrals. As a result, our conversion rate of referrals to admissions increased from 73% last year to 76% this year. With our focus on growth, we continue to strategically invest in our de novo strategy. This strategy complements our organic growth strategy in both segments and allows us to enter a new market at a low capital cost. In April, we opened a new home health location in Melbourne, Florida. Our growth depends on clinical staffing. Success in recruitment and retention helped us eliminate nursing contract labor in 2023, and has positioned us for long-term growth, as evidenced by our performance over the last three quarters. Today, we have 243 more full-time nurses on the front-line taking care of patients than we did at the time of our spin in 2022. We've enhanced our people capabilities to better understand what drives both engagement and retention of our employees. This allows us to better understand how we can best support our employees as they support patients and their families. We have listened to our staff. They want career opportunities. We've developed leadership tracks that enable employees to grow into such roles, such as branch directors, clinical team leaders, and clinical sales positions. In fact, over the last 12 months, 85 of our full-time nurses have been promoted into these types of roles. We are proud of the culture of growth we have created, and we look forward to the continued success it fuels for Enhabit. We're very pleased with the execution of our strategies and the continued progress our teams have made. A great benefit of the size of our company is the ability to experience the various levels of success from our strategies on things such as recruitment, retention, payer strategy, and quality outcomes, and understand how and who is executing them in ways that drive positive outcomes so we can share those across the organization. We remain confident in the need for our services and in the long-range growth potential for Enhabit. Before turning the call over to Crissy to discuss our results in more detail, I wanted to acknowledge the announcement we made yesterday that Crissy will be stepping down as Enhabit’s Chief Financial Officer. We are grateful for Crissy's important contributions to Enhabit since our spinoff from Encompass. I have enjoyed working side by side with her and witnessed firsthand her passion for Enhabit’s mission and her deep commitment to all our stakeholders. She has played a large role in helping the company achieve stability across the business and position our organization for growth. Most importantly, Crissy has been an incredible partner and true friend, and I look forward to her continued leadership as we search for her successor. Crissy.