Thank you, Eric. I will focus my comments on acquisitions and the pipeline as well as an asset management overview of our major asset classes. Since our last call in August, we have closed $149 million of investments in two deals. In August we originated a construction loan to fund up to $27.7 million for the development of an inpatient rehab facility in Lake City, Florida. This is a four-year loan with two one year extension options and carries a rate of 9%. The loan party is a new relationship for NHI, but a group that has plenty of experience developing healthcare properties with over $2 billion in projects completed. NHI has a purchase option on the property after certain licensing and coverage requirements have been met. We also recently announced the acquisition of a 10 property portfolio of senior housing communities in North Carolina for $121.3 million, including transaction costs, at an initial yield of 8.23% with 2% fixed escalators. The properties continue to be managed by Spring Arbor, which is also a new relationship for NHI. The coverage is well above our average coverage for needs driven properties and the lease includes a $10 million earnout incentive which will be added to the base if and when it is funded. The coverage is still full and we have $59.8 million in board approved deals with an average yield of 8.8%. We are also evaluating an actionable pipeline of $350 million investments which have a reasonable chance of closing within the next 12 months. Not included in the pipeline are multiple portfolio deals, including SHOP and skilled nursing, that are in various stages of negotiations. Turning to Asset Management, with the exception of SLM, we had another good quarter with improving EBITDARM coverage and occupancy, deferral collections and shop growth. The need-driven operators again had positive coverage trends with EBITDARM at 1.41 times, representing the tenth straight period of sequential growth. The improvement was driven primarily by Bickford at 1.72 times. Adjusting for the April 1 rent increase, the Bickford coverage would have been a healthy 1.61 times, up from 1.45 times when we reported in the second quarter. Bickford’s quarterly occupancy improved by 80 basis points sequentially to 86.2%. They repaid $1.1 million in deferrals and they recently implemented a mid-single digit price increase. All told, we're very happy with the operational focus and resulting performance. The need-driven coverage excluding Bickford was flat at 1.15x. As we noted last quarter, this was the function of a change in assets and we see upside potential in the recently added properties. Regarding SLM, this is an operator we had been reducing our exposure to for multiple years as we had already sold seven properties since 2021, leaving four remaining leased properties and two loans. Prior to their action to cease payments to NHI, we are in the process of selling another underperforming property as well as transitioning a property to a new operator. The property held for sale is expected to close later this year or early next with NHI providing seller financing. The transition property occurred as expected to the William James Group on October 1. The two other leased properties have healthy EBITDARM coverage and we are pleased to have transitioned them to a more capable operator. We are evaluating multiple scenarios for the two loans and will provide more details when available. We expect to incur some transition expenses in 2024, but should start to recapture a significant portion of the loss NOI next year. In November and separate from SLM, we transitioned a second senior living community to William James Group. This is a new relationship for NHI, but we have worked closely with the management team in the past and are already looking at other opportunities to grow this group. Our entrance fee and skilled nursing portfolios, which together generate approximately 58% of our NOI, continue to show great performance. The discretionary senior housing portfolio, which includes our entrance fee portfolio, had coverage of 1.64x compared to 1.6x in the sequential period. The SNF portfolio reported solid coverage at 3.04x, which improved sequentially from 2.97x. This includes an improvement in NHC's fixed charge coverage ratio to 4.12x from 3.96x. Lastly, in SHOP, momentum continues to build throughout the portfolio. Third quarter NOI increased 30.4% year-over-year and 2.5% sequentially to $3 million. Resident fees increased by 11.4% year-over-year, driven by occupancy improvement to 88.6% from 79% and contributed to 320 basis points of margin expansion to 22%. Compared to the second quarter of 2024, occupancy improved by 160 basis points while the margin declined slightly by 10 basis points. The margin was below our expectation, but occupancy continued to improve throughout the third quarter, ending on a high note at 89.1% of September. As occupancy gets closer to 90%, we expect to start reducing move-in incentives which should lead to an improvement in margin given the significant operating leverage in the independent living model. We are starting to see evidence of this in particular in buildings that have reached or eclipsed the 90% occupancy mark. We tightened our current guidance for annual SHOP NOI growth to the high end of the range from 25% to 30% to 28% to 30%. I'll now turn the call over to John to discuss our financial results and guidance. John?