Thank you, Ed. This morning, we reported net income and normalized FFO of $0.05 and $0.37 per diluted share, respectively, for the first quarter of 2023. There are a few components of these reported results that I will point out. First, this includes no rent or interest income related to Prospect. As we reported last quarter, we are currently recognizing Prospect rental income only as cash is received and Prospect paid no rent or interest during the quarter. I will have a further -- a little further information on our Prospect investment in just a few minutes. Second, there are 2 transactions that we expect will generate more than $900 million in cash proceeds that we plan to use to repay debt. About $830 million will come from the previously announced binding agreements to sell our Australian assets. And just this morning, we announced that Prime Healthcare has elected to exercise its option to repurchase 3 general acute care hospitals for $100 million in cash. Because both transactions are binding and considered probable, accounting principles mandate that we recognize their estimated earnings impact even though neither has closed yet. Accordingly, we adjusted normalized FFO or the non-cash real estate impairment and other charges of approximately $90 million as follows: about $11 million is related to unbilled straight-line rent on the 3 prime hospitals, and I'll come back to Prime in just a minute. And about $79 million in charges relates to the Healthscope sale. That's further broken down as follows: of the total $79 million, these are U.S. dollars, by the way, approximately $37 million is unbilled straight-line rent. Then there are $8 million in fees and costs to sell the hospitals. $13 million is the recognition of previously capitalized currency exchange rate deferrals. And finally, there is a net $20 million difference between the contractual purchase price and our current carrying value, offset by the value of our related interest rate swap agreement. And we will continue to earn rent until closing of both of these transactions, and we'll report that in future quarters as earned. Finally, we do not include a normalized FFO and in direct cost and expenses incurred to respond to the defamatory statements published by certain parties, including those who are dependent in the lawsuit we filed late last month. So upon closing of the Healthscope and prime transactions, receipt of the $900 million plus in cash and the reduction of debt with those proceeds. We have refined our 2023 calendar normalized FFO estimate to a range of between $1.50 and $1.61 per share. This also adjusts for the acquisitions in England and Germany that Ed mentioned and our estimates of revenue from Prospect during the year. With respect to Prospect, during the first quarter, we agreed as part of an expected series of additional agreements to invest $50 million in a convertible loan issued by Prospect’s managed care entities. Subsequent to quarter end, Prospect received a binding commitment from several third-party lenders for financing, which should provide Prospect with significant liquidity. Importantly, A portion of the proceeds of this anticipated financing will be used to pay off Prospect's existing receivables-backed loan arrangement, the result of which will be the Prospect will face no near-term debt maturities. In conjunction with these commitments, we and Prospect agreed to pursue certain follow-on transactions at the closing of which MPT's investments in Prospect assets will be comprised of the following. a master lease covering 6 California hospitals. MPT purchased these hospitals in 2019 for about $500 million. The current contractual cash rental rate is roughly 8.25% and and escalates annually reference to inflation. We presently expect to recommence collection of a portion of the contractual monthly rent in September of this year. Secondly, a first lien mortgage on the Pennsylvania real estate. Third, up to $75 million in a loan secured by first liens on Prospect’s accounts receivable. This amount, which will be fully -- the receivables will be fully unencumbered is well below the existing ABL arrangements borrowing base. And finally, a significant noncontrolling ownership interest in Prospect’s managed care business that will have an agreed value closely tied to the remainder of MPT's recorded investments, which will include unpaid rent and interest. The managed care business has continued to perform well, and we think that is evidenced by the commitment letters for attractive new financing that Prospect has received. As our press release noted and in light of continuing global inflationary banking and other economic conditions, we made limited investments during the quarter. In fact, we continue to emphasize transactions that generate return of capital to us and liquidity for debt reduction. With liquidity at quarter end of approximately $1 billion, plus the more than $900 million from sales that I just mentioned, along with additional cash expectations from the sale of Connecticut to Gale, repayment of Steward loans and other transactions we will be well able to satisfy all of our roughly $1.4 billion in 2023 and 2024 debt maturities. Just a couple of comments back to the prime expected repurchase. This is not a bargain purchase option. Prime is required to pay us the amount that we originally bought the properties for 10-plus years ago. The vast majority of our leases that have repurchase options provide for a repurchase price of the greater of fair value and our original investment. In fact, this $100 million portfolio is the last of the Prime master leases that is at that fixed original price. We were satisfied with these terms at the time we completed the original transactions because of the very attractive lease rate that we negotiated in return. And that will make the sale back to prime FFO dilutive, albeit a relatively small impact because of the high rents we have earned until recently, but the benefits of recycling this capital in the greater liquidity and lower leverage offset that slight dilution. Shortly after quarter end, we closed or committed to acquire a total of behavioral and rehabilitation hospitals in England and Germany were up to an approximate $150 million investment. Similar to our limited late 2022 acquisitions, these acquisitions selectively add to certain existing relationships in ways that strategically strengthen the respective portfolios. At present, there are no other scheduled or expected near-term acquisitions. We have virtually completed our new build hospital for Earnest in Thachton, California, and it will come online and begin paying rent during the second quarter. The earnest new build in South Carolina is still underdeveloped. We continue development of a new state-of-the-art behavioral hospital in Texas for Springstone, now a part of LifePoint. And we continued construction of the 3 general acute care hospitals for our premier Spanish tenant IMED. In conjunction with the redevelopment of Stewart's Norwood Hospital, what you may remember was made unusable by storms and floods during COVID. We advanced $50 million that is secured by, among other things, proceeds from Steward's Insurance claims well in excess of the advance. This development is well underway. Finally, we have already noted the Prospect convertible debt of $50 million we funded in conjunction with the binding funding commitments from third-party lenders to Prospect. Also, as noted in this morning's press release, our Board has declared a quarterly dividend unchanged at $0.29 per share and will be paid on July 13 to stockholders of record on June 15. After a virtually unchanged business model since we started the company almost 20 years ago, I thought I would make a few comments that are relevant to analysis of that model sustainability. At the highest level, one might say that the product MPT sells to its lessees is capital. And capital, of course, has a cost. Our business plan has always recognized that we do not control the cost of that capital particularly with respect to debt cost. And this is true for most REITs and other real estate investors. That is why all of our long-term debt is at fixed rates. It is also why we carefully plan on staggered maturities, both of those cornerstone strategies are consciously designed to help avoid a situation that might otherwise arise if interest rates spike upward and significant amounts of debt mature simultaneously. But critically, our model has always anticipated the likelihood of rising interest rates and the need for our contractual rental rates to increase with the inflationary pressures that result in higher interest rates. Hospital leases typically do not have provision for periodic market rent resets. There are good reasons for that, but beyond the scope of this morning's discussion. Instead, virtually every 1 of MPT's leases provide for annual contractual rental increases that are tied to inflation. Moreover, even in recent years when inflation has been minimal, and, in some cases, even negative, our cash rent has continued to escalate each year. Based on these annual contractual increases in our cash rent, and under almost any reasonable and historically normalized assumptions, rents from our existing portfolio only are expected to increase at rates at least comparable to interest rate increases in our maturing debt issues. My point, of course, is that our model is designed to anticipate normal course volatility in interest rates and other macroeconomic conditions. And moreover, analyzing a straw man scenario that any REIT might be forced to immediately refinance all of its debt at shock interest rates, even though that debt matures over many years in the future is probably not a good use of anyone's time. Finally, we did point out in this morning's press release that recent transactions have supported the values of our leased assets. We think it important to point that out. because it demonstrates that sophisticated investors and operators recognize and are willing to invest billions of dollars based on the long-term sustainability of our model, particularly our receipt of annually increasing rental payments that are generated from local hospital operations. With that, we have time for a few questions, and I'll turn the call back over to the operator.