Thank you, Barb. Before recapping the results for the fourth quarter, I would like to thank Barb and the broader Enhabit, Inc. board for the opportunity to join the team here as CFO back in December. In my short time in the role, it is clear to me that our strategy is sound, and we are well-positioned to deliver meaningful shareholder value. Many of the key elements are in place to deliver revenue growth across both segments while also creating leverage on our cost base. Combining these elements with a continued focus on a healthy payer mix in our home health segment should improve the overall margin profile of our business. As we execute this strategy, we will continue to focus on deleveraging our balance sheet to provide more flexibility under our capital structure and open additional avenues for growth. Shifting to our Q4 consolidated results, we delivered improved performance sequentially both in revenue and adjusted EBITDA, despite one-time challenges within the quarter. In the fourth quarter, consolidated net revenue was $258.2 million, an increase sequentially of $4.6 million or 1.8% quarter over quarter, while a decrease of $2.4 million or 0.9% year over year. Consolidated sequential revenue growth was led by continued strong momentum in our hospice segment, on both volume and rate, partially offset by lower revenue from the Home Health segment primarily related to hurricane volume impacts early in the quarter. Consolidated revenue growth in the quarter translated into improved profitability sequentially, with consolidated adjusted EBITDA of $25.1 million in the quarter, an increase sequentially of $0.6 million or 2.4%, while remaining relatively flat year over year. Drivers of Q4 consolidated profitability improvement sequentially include improved revenue performance partially offset by our annual merit increase effective October first. Before shifting to our Q4 segment performance commentary, I would like to highlight that we have incorporated new segment performance views recapping both revenue and margin performance into our supplemental materials that we intend to provide on a go-forward basis. We believe these to be helpful in visualizing performance both year over year and sequentially in terms of volume, unit revenue, and adjusted EBITDA for both segments. The performance views for both segments will use census, which we will use interchangeably with the term average daily census or ADC for volume and unit metrics. Growing census is the ultimate driver of financial results in each of our business segments. With 72% of our Home Health census now in episodic payers, we believe we can move to a more direct way of measuring our home health business metrics using census. For home health, both admissions and recertification contribute to growing overall census. And growing census with the right payer mix ultimately drives increasing revenue. On the cost side, optimizing staffing while maintaining high-quality outcomes should create more clinical capacity, allowing us to support more census on similar costs, thereby improving cost per patient day. Now shifting to Q4 home health segment. Revenue came in at $200.4 million, a decrease of $0.6 million or 0.3% sequentially on a volume decrease of 0.5% in average daily census, primarily due to hurricane-related impacts early in Q4. This was partially offset by unit revenue per patient day increase of 0.1% sequentially, which was driven by growth in Medicare ADC of 1%, partially offset by lower patient acuity mix. Home Health adjusted EBITDA totaled $35.5 million in Q4, reflecting a sequential decrease of $1.0 million or 2.7% with a gross margin decrease of $0.2 million and an increase in back-office operations G&A cost of $0.8 million. The gross margin decrease sequentially reflects lower patient volume and a flat gross margin as a percent of revenue. We were able to offset the impact of merit, with productivity gains at the gross margin level effective October one, while increased back-office G&A is primarily due to an annual merit increase. A few key items to highlight in home health outside of broader revenue and adjusted EBITDA performance include the following. Medicare ADC improved sequentially in Q4 to 20,818. We have seen continued growth thus far in Q1 2025, with current Medicare ADC above 20,000. Based on current trends, we expect this sequential improvement to continue in Q1. In addition to Medicare ADC improvement, our overall episodic ADC, which includes both traditional Medicare and non-Medicare episodic payers, grew to 72% in Q4 in the third straight quarter of sequential improvement. This improves our mix of episodic ADC, which generally has a unit revenue advantage to non-episodic payers. We successfully managed the cost of services in Q4, keeping our cost per patient day year over year to a 1% increase. This reflects improved productivity offset by the impact of merit and market-related increases. Unit cost results demonstrate our continued focus on controlling staffing costs through productivity and optimizing staff while maintaining patient care and quality. Now shifting to Q4 hospice segment performance. Revenue came in at $57.8 million, an increase of $5.2 million or 9.9% sequentially on both a volume increase and average daily census of 3% and a unit revenue improvement of 6.9%. As the new CMS rate for hospice became effective October one, coupled with hospice cap accrual favorability, versus the prior quarter. Hospice adjusted EBITDA totaled $13.3 million in Q4, reflecting a sequential increase of $3.3 million or 33% on increased revenues combined with gross margin expansion as unit revenue growth outpaced unit cost increases primarily related to annual merit increase. A few key items to highlight in hospice outside of broader revenue adjusted EBITDA performance include the following. Hospice adjusted EBITDA margin as a percent of revenue at 23% in Q4 reflects four straight quarters of sequential improvement and the highest adjusted EBITDA as a percent of revenue for this segment post-spin. We continue to realize leverage benefits from growth, as we mature the case management model. Q4 hospice ADC of 3,729 is 3.9% higher than the previous post-spin segment peak in Q4 of 2022. Q1 2025 trends indicate sequential ADC growth will continue in early 2025. Our de novo strategy continues to plant the seeds for future growth as we open five hospice de novo locations in 2024. Confidence in our de novo strategy remains strong as contribution from the seven hospice locations launched in 2022 and 2023, generated $6.2 million of revenues and $1.2 million of adjusted EBITDA in full year 2024. Shifting to Q4 home office general expenses, which totaled $23.7 million or 9.2% of revenues in Q4, an increase of $1.7 million or 7.7% sequentially. This increase is primarily related to the merit increase effective October first and an unfavorable increase in group insurance claim cost. Full-year home office general and administrative totaled $100.8 million, or 9.7% of revenue. This reflects a $7 million improvement to the prior year, while also lowering our home office expenses as a percentage of revenue by 60 basis points to full year 2023. Improvements are primarily due to targeted cost savings initiatives and lower incentive compensation, which more than offset merit and other inflationary increases. Let's now transition to the balance sheet and cash flow performance. We remain focused on using free cash flow to improve our leverage profile, having reduced outstanding debt by approximately $40 million in 2024. We have available liquidity of approximately $80 million, including approximately $28 million of cash on hand. We believe this is adequate to support our operations, including our de novo strategy. In regard to cash flow, we generated approximately $54 million of adjusted free cash flow during 2024, which equates to an adjusted free cash flow conversion rate of approximately 54%. Let's now turn to 2025 guidance. Please note that our 2025 guidance and related considerations can be found in our supplemental materials. Our 2025 guidance range for net service revenue is $1.05 billion to $1.08 billion, with adjusted EBITDA in a range of $101 million to $107 million, reflecting growth of approximately 7% at the widest end of the range. We believe the quarterly cadence of our full-year adjusted EBITDA guidance will reflect incremental sequential improvement each quarter throughout 2025, with acceleration post-Q1 where we expect 23% to 24% of full-year adjusted EBITDA to come in. The quarterly cadence outlined reflects a trough in our home health segment as we pivot from replacement to growth mode throughout Q1, following the signing of our national agreement in late Q4 2024. I will now briefly summarize the building blocks of our guidance beginning with home health. As Barb mentioned in her remarks, we believe that 2024 was a foundational year to set the stage for consistent census growth while using the results of our payer innovation strategy to differentiate ourselves in the market as a true full-service provider to our referral source, allowing us to both grow and improve mix. This combined with continued staffing and cost discipline should allow us to expand home health margins as we exit 2025, despite CMS rate reimbursement increases not keeping pace with our overall market inflation. For home health volumes, we assume full-year ADC growth of 4% to 5%, which assumes a lower volume beginning entry point in 2025 than where we entered 2024, limiting full-year growth rates. In addition to volume growth, we assume that we slow the rate of decline in Medicare volumes. We anticipate reducing our rate of Medicare volume decline approximately in half from what we saw in 2024 and more consistent with overall industry trends. In regard to home health unit revenue, we expect revenue per patient day to decrease 0.5% to remain flat on the full year, which reflects improvements in CMS Medicare pricing of approximately 1% in 2025 based on the home health final rule. We also expect our Medicare Advantage pricing to improve based on the success of our payer innovation team, including a full-year impact from the renegotiated national agreement, with improved rates that became effective in January of 2025. These rate improvements will be largely offset by assumed unfavorable mix primarily related to lower Medicare volumes. While we anticipate reducing our Medicare year-over-year ADC declines, we still anticipate this to be a mixed headwind, particularly in the first half of 2025, as we build back Medicare volumes from our trough in late 2024. For hospice, we remain focused on building our 2024 momentum and growing census, resulting in additional operating leverage in this segment. For hospice volumes in 2025, we assume hospice ADC growth of 7% to 8.5%. We anticipate building on the strong exit rate volumes from 2024 as we remain clinically staffed to grow and continue to execute on our broader de novo strategy. For hospice pricing in 2025, we expect our hospice unit revenue per patient day to improve in the 4% to 5% range, which reflects the hospice final rule effective October one, combined with anticipated favorable hospice cap liability development.