Thank you, Ed. This morning, we reported normalized FFO of $0.46 per diluted share. The $0.01 change from the first quarter's result was expected and is primarily related to the effect of the late first quarter close of the Macquarie joint venture. As this morning's press release noted, our 2022 calendar year guidance of $1.78 to $1.82 per share remains unchanged. Adjustments to normalized FFO are routine and immaterial individually and in the aggregate, and I'll be happy to address any questions during our Q&A. So for the next few minutes, I want to discuss a few of the slides we posted this morning as an investor update. Frankly, these slides are more of an investor reminder that an update because nothing has changed from how we have run the company and underwritten the real estate that comprises about 85% of our total assets since our inception. But of course, as we have grown from $0 in assets in 2004 to $22 billion today, our investor base has certainly changed, and some investors do not have the long-term history that others have. So we believe this is a good time to describe our general strategy for investing in hospital real estate and review the outstanding successes our strategy has delivered over that 18-year period. Then before we go to Q&A, I will briefly describe our expectations about investments and capital markets activities in the present market and economic environment. First and foremost, we invest primarily in real estate. We underwrite our real estate investments to attract successful operators such that just like most REITs and other real estate investors, if any particular lessee is unable to continue paying our rent, we expect to find another lessee that can. In other words, it is the characteristics of our real assets that we believe attract successful operators and sustainable real estate returns as opposed to relying on any particular operator lessee to bring value to our real assets. Slide 4 in our investor update summarizes some of the key characteristics of hospital real estate that if present, will attract a profitable replacement operator if necessary. The more of these real estate characteristics that any particular hospital facility has, the more likely it is that, that hospital is truly critical community infrastructure that a replacement operator will be able to run profitably and continue paying us attractive real estate returns. Many of you have heard MPT's executive officers acknowledge that it is the primary responsibility of MPT management to identify, underwrite and invest in hospital real estate that has these characteristics. And our history proves that we have been successful in doing so. That is what Slide 5 and the update demonstrates. In our 18-year history, we have invested about $24 billion in the real estate assets of about 530 hospitals. And due to our specialized hospital expertise applied to our initial underwriting, it has only been necessary to replace operators of 20 of these facilities. That's in addition to the Adeptus relationship, which we described in last quarter's investor update. Slide 5 demonstrates that we have actually made money. Frankly, we think this should be the expectation for real estate investors, certainly across the long term. And to be clear, this slide aggregates every instance of operator replacement over 18-plus years. And by the way, this success is not solely due to our underwriting. Slide 5 also describes the value of being a lessor versus a lender and of the master lease structure, both of which are key components of our overall strategies and historical success. Finally, Slide 5 calls out 3 examples of the 11 instances of operator replacement, each with different causes and outcomes. Town & Country, which was a ground-up development of a state-of-the-art acute hospital in MOB due to our careful underwriting that we consciously designed to ensure that this real estate was needed in and valuable to the surrounding community. This campus was extremely attractive to other prospective operators in the Houston market. When the original lessee was unable to access profitable managed care contracts and by the way, a risk that MPT identified very early in the underwriting process. We had multiple alternatives and ultimately elected to sell our real estate for an attractive price to the dominant acute provider in the market, and we more than recovered our investment. Just to make clear, again, it was the real estate, not the operator that was valuable to the buyer. Shasta Hospital in Redding, California is a good example of what can happen when an operator's parent not MPT's lessee gets into financial stress and even enters bankruptcy. Our hospital real estate was being operated at an attractive EBITDA coverage ratio even when the parent company, who was our guarantor, was deeply [indiscernible] because of the facility level profitability and because our lease is almost always mandate that our lessee is a special purpose entity, creditors may not attach our real estate assets or facility operations other than secured receivables. Shasta was truly a community infrastructure asset. To the extent that the state of California regulators work with us and the replacement operator to transfer licenses and keep the hospital open in a matter of 24 hours. There was simply not enough capacity in the market to absorb the loss of patient access that a closure of Shasta would have created. It has then been operated at strong profitability. And not only did we negotiate higher rents with the new operator but we were paid a $12 million cash inducement fee in addition to net rent. Finally, the slide calls out our small LTAC in New Orleans as an example, because it was our very first RIDEA transaction, giving us the ability to capture operating upside in addition to the real estate rents, which in this case were unchanged from the prior operator. Just to summarize, again, in these cases and a few other instances when we have had to terminate a lessee, it was the quality and characteristics of our real estate that protected us from material financial losses. The operating results of the terminated lessee did not impair our asset or impact the value of our recoveries. And by the way, virtually all of the $20 million in losses you see on Slide 5 resulted from a single relationship that comprised 5 of the 20 facilities summarized. And even some of this could have been avoided because we elected to contribute one of the facilities to the local community instead of selling it for value. Our point in going through this is not to highlight operator failures, but to point out that, first, we invest in real assets whose values are not derived from any particular lessee. And second, if we continue to carefully underwrite as we have since our inception, even when there is, as there will inevitably be operator weaknesses, we have good reason to believe that we will successfully retenant our hospital real estate. It doesn't simply turn into an empty building that generates no rental revenue. But to be clear, any such transition is disruptive in a management distraction and this motivates us to work with tenants that we believe can recover from their problems, sometimes even to the extent of providing financial support. But the amount of any such financial support is considered in the aggregate $20 million loss mentioned on Slide 5. Some REITs address these tenant issues, but generally, MPT has not done so, with permanent reductions of rent, other material amendments to lease obligations, acquisition of equity or preferred ownership and purchase of tenant operations among other means. I want to take a couple of minutes to consider our largest tenant relationship, Steward, which Ed has already highlighted. First, the characteristics of the 41 hospitals we own and lease to Steward, regardless of whether or not Steward remains the operator, are consistent with those that we've discussed earlier and that would be very attractive to competitors and other potential replacement operators. Slide 4 refers to them in detail, so I will comment only briefly. First, and as we have previously discussed, the real estate we own and presently leased to Steward comprises 6 different markets. In the aggregate, the facility-level EBITDARM coverage for the 12 months ended March 31 was 2.6x. Remember, this includes, as Ed mentioned, 2 relatively weak quarters of financial performance across the entire hospital industry. That is evidenced by the publicly reporting operators such as HCA, Tenet and others. My point, of course, is that even in -- the industry-wide weak operating and financial environment, the Steward facilities continue to operate profitably at the facility level. And by the way, EBITDARM coverages across the 6 markets range from 2.0x to 3.7x. Secondly, I remind you that Steward’s Massachusetts operations, it's first and among its largest markets, was recently subjected to detailed and sophisticated underwriting as part of last quarter's completion of our joint venture with Macquarie Infrastructure Funds. This process confirmed our own evaluation of the value of the Massachusetts real estate. Finally, and very importantly, I will just reiterate what Ed discussed about the recent generation of EBITDAR for May and June. On an annualized basis for these 2 most recent months, the run rate EBITDAR for Stewart approximated $800 million, including more than $350 million for the Utah and Florida markets combined. We are not suggesting that these annualized run rates will be sustained because there's no assurance that they will be. But we are confident that Steward, especially in its major markets, is a healthy operator and will continue to pay its rent based on very strong long-term coverage ratios. And most importantly, even if Steward is not the lessee, we believe the value and characteristics of our real estate currently leased to Steward, will attract, frankly, as it already has multiple potential replacement operators. But we expect additional contributions Steward's improving operations will also include, again, as Ed mentioned, by the middle of next month, Steward will have fully repaid over $400 million of MAP funding and have completed its transition from Tenant’s Management of its recent Florida Portfolio acquisition, freeing up between a total of $45 million and $50 million of cash flow per month starting earlier than in October. That provides up to $600 million on an annualized basis and incremental cash flow. Almost $70 million of delayed Texas Medicaid waiver payments will have been received by the end of the third quarter. Moreover, Steward's Texas hospitals expect to begin receiving an incremental $6 million per month based on new Medicaid waiver calculations. Elective procedures in Steward's Massachusetts hospitals returned to normal during the second quarter. And in fact, we expect that Steward will receive state reimbursement in the near term of almost $30 million for COVID-related losses. Moreover, the staffing and other industry-wide issues, which we have heard about from recent quarterly reports from public acute operators have similar to those reports, also began to substantially improve across the Steward system. In addition to this recovery of cash that Steward has funded in recent months, Steward has begun implementing strategic and operational initiatives that should lead to further near-term improvements. First, the previously disclosed sale of Steward's value-based Medicare business to CareMax would not only generate additional liquidity of as much as $125 million, but just as importantly, will align the interest of both organizations in a manner that will pave the way for future profitable growth opportunities. Second, as the industry continues to recover from the Omicron-related revenue and staffing pressures from late 2021. Steward has almost completely executed substantial cost initiatives in labor, purchase services, the previously mentioned runoff of the Tenant Management Services Contract and further EHR cost rationalization. In the aggregate, Steward expects these to range between $350 million and $400 million annually. Finally, let me give you a little perspective about the terminated sale of Steward's Utah operations to HCA. Almost a year ago, Steward and HCA agreed to a binding agreement for the sale of these operations. Unfortunately, the FTC blocked the transaction and it was ultimately terminated. Nonetheless, the value of Steward's Utah operations and the value of MPT's Utah real estate that were both so attractive to HCA have not gone away. In fact, Steward continued to improve the financial performance of Utah, even while waiting to close the sale to HCA. Steward now has alternatives with respect to Utah, including retaining and continuing to operate the highly profitable market itself. Notwithstanding Steward's strong recent and improving facility level EBITDARM performance across its portfolio. The most recent quarters have suffered from cash pressures. These were caused by, for the most part, the investment of more than $200 million in last summer's acquisition of 5 hospitals in the Miami area. The repayment of the previously mentioned $420 million in MAP obligations. Delay of Medicaid reimbursement by the state of Texas of close to $70 million, the mandated restrictions of elective procedures in Massachusetts late last year and earlier this year, and of course, the termination of the HCA transaction. And as I described a minute ago, with the exception of the cash proceeds that were anticipated from the terminated HCA sale, these issues are almost fully resolved and even more importantly, we are confident in the near-term improvements in operating cash flows that could aggregate up to $1 billion annually. So all of this describes why we remain enthusiastic about, first and foremost, the value of our hospital real estate, but also of Steward's near and long-term outlooks. This led us to agree early in the second quarter to facilitate Steward's transition of its recent cash pressures to the strongly positive cash flow outlook I have just described by providing a $150 million debt facility to Steward. Among other key terms in the facility are a relatively short 5-year term cross collateralization to our master leases, mandatory prepayment from proceeds of any sale of Utah and other operations and attractive [quicker] interest payment. The strength of our master lease structure, whereby we basically have first priority in the valuable Utah and Florida operations, along with other markets, made this investment decision very attractive for MPT. Moving on to a brief discussion of capital acquisition. We previously predicted that our 2022 acquisitions volume will be in the $1 billion to $3 billion range. And given the rapid and dramatic development in the capital markets and the global economic environment, even since our last earnings call, acquisitions will likely be -- very likely be on the low end of that range. There are no meaningfully sized transactions in the pipeline, although there are actually a number of potential transactions in the market, and we are generally seeing indications that sellers are beginning to adjust their expectations in line with changes in the cost of real estate capital. But I do want to reiterate an MPT stream that we have always felt has not received enough recognition, and that is our built-in inflationary rental escalations. Slide 13 in the update deck summarizes, based on July 2022 U.S. and European inflation rates, the increase in cash rents we expect to receive in 2023 compared to a same-store portfolio in 2022. So in other words, this accounts for the Macquarie joint venture as if it occurred on January 1, 2022. We estimate that our cash rents will increase in 2023 over 2022 by about $57 million as a result of our inflationary escalators. That's an average increase across the portfolio of approximately 4.4%. Applying an estimated and arbitrary blended capitalization rate of 6.5% to this incremental cash results in the equivalent of about $875 million of additional leased real estate, for which we have zero cost of capital. So in capital markets that are temporarily squeezing investment spreads, we are very pleased with the built-in improvements in yield that we expect beginning early in 2023. And of course, that's on top of the previously disclosed 2022 escalation. And with that, we'll turn the call over to questions. Dennis?