Thank you, Eric. I'll concentrate my comments on investment and disposition activity as well as the performance of our major asset classes and operators. We closed on the sale of seven properties for net proceeds of $42 million since the end of the first quarter, leaving just four properties held for sale. Since the second quarter of 2021, we completed the sale of 48 senior housing and skilled nursing properties for net proceeds of $392 million. These properties generated low single-digit NOI yields with very thin lease coverage. With this process effectively complete, we are in a great position to deploy capital, given our low leverage and an acquisition environment that seems to be moving towards a buyer's market. The pipeline is starting to reflect the changes in our cost of capital. We have multiple LOIs in process, so we are confident we'll announce new investment activity before the end of the year. Shifting to asset management. Overall, second quarter contractual cash collections were approximately 97%. Relative to the first quarter and excluding the impact of discrete items, we collected approximately $1.9 million less from two senior housing tenants. This included approximately $800,000 in rent concessions to one operator and approximately $1.1 million in lower collections from a tenant on cash basis accounting. As Eric noted, we have taken action to address the shortfall, including allocating additional asset management resources and selling negative cash flow properties. We are already benefiting from these actions, which gives us confidence that our third and fourth quarter results will improve. EBITDARM coverage for the company increased sequentially to 1.75 times from 1.7 times, driven by gains in senior housing. Remember that the coverage metrics represent trailing 12-month results and do not reflect better occupancy and margin trends we generally experienced in the second quarter of 2023. Total occupancy improved year-over-year by 280 basis points to 81.7% on a 240-basis point increase in senior housing and a 330-basis point increase in skilled nursing. Reviewing the need-driven platform, which is 26% of annualized cash NOI, we again saw positive trends with coverage at 1.22 times, representing the fifth straight quarter of sequential growth. The increase was driven in large part by Bickford at 1.41 times, which now reflects the full impact of the April 2022 rent reset. Bickford's second quarter occupancy improved by 40 basis points to 82% compared to first quarter of 2023, and average monthly occupancy improved throughout the quarter with June at 82.7%. The strong net move-ins continued into the third quarter, and spot occupancy at the end of last week was 83.7%. Bickford repaid over $350,000 in deferrals during the second quarter, with a similar amount were higher expected in the third quarter. Aside from Bickford, coverage is increasing across the other 40 need-driven properties, which account for approximately 13% of annualized NOI. We reported coverage at 1.07 times, which is the second -- which is the highest reported coverage since the second quarter of 2020 and the sixth straight quarter of sequential improvement. While the trend is encouraging at just over 1 times coverage, the environment for these operators remains difficult even with reported occupancy at 87%. This asset class is where most of our optimization efforts have been focused. The progress has been slow but steady, and we think improving financial, improving industry fundamentals, coupled with our direct actions, will result in fewer rent concessions. Continuing with our discretionary senior housing portfolio, this group accounts for 30% of adjusted NOI, including 27% from entrance-fee communities. SLC, our largest tenant, improved coverage sequentially to 1.28 times from 1.17 times, driven by excellent entrance-fee sales in the first quarter, which continued into the second. Our senior housing discretionary coverage, excluding SLC, which largely reflects the performance of our other entrance-fee communities declined sequentially to 1.34 times from 1.75 times. This was driven by higher entrance-fee refunds at a couple of properties in the first quarter. We know this business can be bumpy from quarter-to-quarter due to the variable nature of entrance-fee sales and refunds, but this is certainly not on our worry list. The SNF and specialty hospital portfolio, which represents 37% of annualized adjusted NOI, reported solid coverage at 2.48 times, which is unchanged sequentially. SNF occupancy improved by 330 basis points year-over-year to 79%. Since the start of the pandemic, NHI has provided a rent deferral to only one SNF operator in late 2021 and early 2022. This operator started repaying the balance in the second half of 2022 and thus far has repaid more than 50% of the deferral amount. NHC and ENSIGN obviously anchor our SNF portfolio, but we've been happy with the performance of all the operators, which gives us confidence in their ability to adapt to any new rule change, including a potential staffing mandate. Lastly, in our SHOP portfolio, which represents 3% of adjusted NOI, we are still experiencing margin pressure, and the performance is below our initial projections. But we are making progress and the portfolio did generate a $200,000 sequential NOI improvement. The margin improved 170 basis points from the first quarter to 17.9%, and monthly occupancy increased for a fourth straight month through June to 75.6%. The sales pipeline has been building gradually throughout the year, and June proved to easily be our strongest move-in and net move-in month of the year. This bodes well for July as preliminary results indicate that monthly occupancy increased another 170 basis points to 77.3%. The recent trends give us conviction in our longer-term view that this portfolio can generate NOI dollars in the high teens and margins in the mid-30% range. This provides an excellent source of internal growth while building a platform with a long runway for external growth. I'll now turn the call over to John to discuss our financial results and guidance.