Good morning, everyone and thank you, Jen. Welcome to today's call, where we'll talk about our second quarter 2023 results. Our revenue for the second quarter was $1.6 billion, up 4% at constant currency, compared with the prior year period. In the second quarter, our women's health and biosimilars franchise grew double digit, while our Established Brands franchise achieved flat performance again demonstrating its continued stability. Adjusted EBITDA was $530 million, representing a 33% margin. Turning to the full year. Given our current view of foreign currency exchange rates we narrowed our guidance range on revenue from $6.15 billion to $6.45 billion to now $6.25 billion to $6.45 billion, which raises the midpoint of the revenue range by $50 million. We also raised the lower end of our adjusted EBITDA guidance based on our latest visibility into potential milestone payments. The new range of the full year is 31.5% to 33%, a quarter of a percentage point higher at the midpoint compared with prior guidance. Now, let's review the quarter in greater detail, beginning with women's health. Women's health grew 10% on a constant currency basis, primarily driven by 12% growth in Nexplanon. Performance of Nexplanon in the US was particularly strong this quarter, with revenue growth of 19%. This reflects the 5% increase in US physician demand and increase in distributor inventory as well as the benefit of our pricing action in the third quarter of 2022. Year-to- date, Nexplanon is up 6% outpacing the large market, which grew 3% over the same period. We expect continued demand growth in the United States, especially with the more than 35,000 healthcare professionals currently prescribing Nexplanon. We also expect increasing demand outside the US, especially in Latin America and countries like Brazil and Argentina as well as in Asia and countries like Thailand and the Philippines. We continue to believe that Nexplanon will achieve $1 billion in revenue by 2025 and we expect Nexplanon to be a significant contributor to growth for the coming years. Continuing our discussion on women's health, fertility was up 17% at constant currency. As we have discussed, China and the US are large fertility markets and together represent more than half of our current fertility business. During the second quarter, we saw significant growth in China, where there was a post-COVID rebound as patients return to clinics for treatment. We have a very positive outlook for the fertility business in China for the remainder of the year. In the US, the fertility market is growing and remains an attractive business for Organon. We're seeing increasing demand from our existing customer base, but also since then, we've worked to improve the consistency and reliability of our supply chain, which has allowed us to win incremental business from existing customers and to expand into new accounts in the reimburse market. Demand is very strong in the US market and we believe volume will continue to offset a competitive pricing environment. Over the intermediate term, we believe our global fertility business can grow in the high single digit to low double digit range in line with our expectations for 2023. Wrapping up on women's health is the JADA system, our device for post-partum haemorrhage. Year to date, revenue from JADA has more than doubled, albeit off a small base, and it's fast approaching a threshold where we'll start to disclose its revenue in our product table. During the second quarter, we added more than 300 new accounts. We are now in over a 100 of the 150 largest birthing hospitals in the US and more than 28,000 mothers have been treated with JADA since launch. The enthusiasm around JADA is palpable and ranges from a rising profile in scientific journals like the RUBY studies upcoming publication to healthcare professionals taking the social media to talk about the product. Overall, we are feeling very good about the future prospects for JADA. Moving now to our biosimilars business where today I'll focus my discussion around the US launch of HADLIMA, our biosimilar for Humira. Since launch, all major wholesalers have placed orders for HADLIMA. We're encouraged by our early traction as Organon is emerging as one of the few players earning spots on formularies and winning orders. In approaching the launch of HADLIMA, we were very intentional in our market positioning and segmentation. Our pricing strategy focuses on simplicity. It was a deliberate choice and design, so that the savings for the healthcare system would be more transparent. We've priced HADLIMA to enable access and to bring the economic benefits of biocimilars directly to the patient. We believe this is where we can offer the highest utility to patients. For example, here we're showing the two PBMs who have so far announced their formulary listings, Optum RX and Express Scripts. You can see where Organon has already been able to secure access within both PBMs outside of their national formulary listings. In the case of Optum RX, we have secured more than half of the lives through United Healthcare. In the case of Express Scripts between Cigna and Prime Therapeutics, we've secured about a third of the lives. Prime Therapeutics is the fourth largest PBM. Health plans of Prime include some of the largest Blue Cross Blue Shield plans in the nation. Many of these health plans are the dominant player in their respective states. And for both Optum Rx and Express Scripts, we remain active in discussions for the custom health plan business. While we're very encouraged by the access we've secured so far, access alone does not guarantee success. And access doesn't necessarily mean the patients will get the product. This is why our strategy is expressly focused on customers that are not dependent on rebates, but rather the providers in the market who are focused on bringing the savings of biosimilars to the patients and we're not done. The market is still evolving. Decisions from PBMs and insurers are still forthcoming. Product attributes will be a key in continuing to unlock opportunities. We continue to believe HADLIMA is positively positioned when it comes to its product attributes. For example, our pen design received an Arthritis Foundation designation which recognizes products that make life easier for those living with arthritis and other functional limitations. We also developed the HADLIMA For You Patient Support program that features comprehensive resources including a co-pay program and dedicated nurse coaches who engage with patients throughout their treatment journey. One of the most important differentiators for HADLIMA is the five years of real-world evidence covering tens of thousands of patients that we have collected from Samsung's launch in Europe and from our own launches in Canada and Australia. This data should give great confidence and comfort to prescribers and patients alike. And we continue to move forward with our collaborator Samsung on the interchangeability designation. We recently announced that the Phase 4 study had reached its primary endpoint, which puts us on track for a summer of 2024 approval. And finally, our product formulation is high concentration, citrate-free, aligned with the most prescribed formulation of the originator. A product that can create a frictionless experience for a patient is the best way to drive pull-through. That is what gives patients a better comfort level and will influence physician prescriptions. The U.S. healthcare system needs biosimilars to be successful. They fill a significant gap in more affordable options for some of the most chronic diseases people face. We're proud of our market positioning and pricing. We're very pleased and encouraged by the signals we are getting so far, and we believe we'll be able to secure further access as this market continues to develop. Rounding out the topline discussion, let's move on to Established Brands. Year-to-date, the Established Brands franchise has grown 1% ex-exchange as 2% volume growth has offset a 1% decline in price across the portfolio. Since launch, we've encountered skepticism around how a portfolio of off-patent brands can demonstrate that kind of continued stability. There are several reasons, and over the next few quarters, we will highlight a few of them in detail. Last quarter, we talked about manufacturing optimization for Nasonex and Atozet to meet increasing demand resulting from heightened promotional activity. Today, I'll focus on our strategic approach to pricing. In some lower-priced markets, lawmakers are backing policies that propose to raise originator and generic prices, hoping to draw manufacturers back into the market and cure ongoing supply issues. This is true in select EU markets such as Germany, France and Sweden, as well as some APAC markets like India and Australia. Where this isn't the case, we have worked with policy makers to demonstrate how investments are important to ensure access to reliable and high-quality manufactured products. Further, we've been able to selectively increase our list price in many markets, subject to meeting certain conditions. An example is our LAMERA region, where currency devaluation and inflation provided a basis for a lot of price increases in a number of countries. Beyond increasing list price, we've also scrubbed the channel for commercial and trade discount improvements. As we continue to look at this portfolio, we're identifying opportunities that gives us greater confidence that the five-year CAGR for this franchise will be relatively flat on a constant currency basis. This June, we entered into our third year as a standalone company. Thanks to the hard work of our people around the world, and their commitment to our vision and business, each of our franchises are performing as good as or better than we thought they would. Importantly, we have grown our pipeline since launch and have added eight assets to our portfolio, which includes some very interesting molecules in the early stages of development. This investment is key, so that over time, Organon evolves into a pharma company with a regular cadence of catalysts at an accelerating growth rate. In our first two years as a company, we continue to build a track record of good operational results, while also laying the groundwork for a successful future. I'll turn it over to Matt now to talk more about the solid results of the second quarter in more detail.