Thanks, Ed, and good afternoon, everyone. We were very excited to announce the signed agreement for the sale of the Products & Healthcare Services segment a few weeks ago. I've had the pleasure of getting to know and working with the Platinum Equity team and absolutely believe they are the right owners for the P&HS business. Further, we're extremely excited about our future as a Pure-Play Home-Based Care company with all the positive attributes that come with it, as Ed detailed. We look forward to having a simpler business model and a cleaner investment thesis. We also believe our ability to dedicate investments solely into the subtractive space will lead to much greater results for all stakeholders. As you will recall from last quarter, the Products & Healthcare Services segment is being accounted for as an asset held for sale discontinued operations. So unless stated otherwise, my remarks today will focus solely on the continuing operations, which, as a reminder, is made up of our Patient Direct business and certain functional operations and identified stranded costs from the separation. Also, please note that any discussion about the financial results and outlook for the business will cover only non-GAAP financial measures. You can find GAAP to non-GAAP financial reconciliations in the press release filed a short time ago and residing on our website. Turning now to the third quarter results. Revenue was $697 million compared to just under $687 million in the third quarter of last year. Last year, in the third quarter, there was a $6 million onetime revenue benefit from a multiyear claims reprocessing matter. This impacted the growth rate by about 80 basis points. In the quarter, there was decent year-over-year growth in the key categories of sleep therapy, ostomy and urology. Diabetes was nearly flat compared to the third quarter of 2024, but showed better year-over-year performance compared to the second quarter. We continue to ramp up efforts to recapture stronger diabetes growth through improved therapy adherence and capturing more customers across our entire ecosystem of both DME and our own pharmacy channel. Overall, we would expect revenue in Q4 to show a similar year-over-year growth rate but be seasonally improved from the third quarter in absolute dollar terms. For the 9 months ended September 30, revenue was nearly $2.1 billion, up 3.4%, with last year's Q3 onetime benefit that I just mentioned, having a 30 basis point impact on growth compared to 2024. Similar to the quarter, growth for the year-to-date period was led by sleep therapy, ostomy and urology as well as smaller categories, including chest wall oscillation, which although is still small, has shown a phenomenal growth and demonstrates our ability to successfully expand our therapy portfolio. Adjusted EBITDA for the third quarter was $92 million compared to $108 million in last year's third quarter. Here, that same onetime $6 million benefit from last year falls straight through to adjusted EBITDA and hindered reported EBITDA growth by nearly 500 basis points. Additionally, product cost increases and higher health benefit costs were only partially offset by lower general costs such as delivery, outsourcing and occupancy expenses. It is important to realize that the third quarter adjusted EBITDA from continuing operations, of course, includes the normal adjustments to EBITDA of interest, income taxes, depreciation and amortization and less than $1 million of exit and realignment charges. So the $92 million earn is an appropriate representation of cash earnings before interest and taxes. This return to a higher earnings quality is quite different from what we've been able to report over the past several quarters. There will certainly be periods of time where there are cash adjustments in the adjusted EBITDA figure, but this is an example of what is meant when we refer to a cleaner and simpler investment story as a result of the divestiture. For the year-to-date period, adjusted EBITDA was $285 million, a reported 6.3% increase compared to $268 million for the 9 months ended in 2024. On the larger year-to-date adjusted EBITDA amount, last year's third quarter onetime $6 million benefit was an approximate 230 basis point drag on the year-to-date growth rate. Third quarter results include $11 million of stranded costs, which is the same as last year's third quarter and the second quarter of 2025. Year-to-date stranded costs were $25 million versus $39 million for the same period in 2024. We continue to believe the annualized stranded costs from the divestiture will be approximately $40 million. Adjusted net income was $0.25 per share, which compares to $0.36 per share in the third quarter of 2024. For the 9 months ended September 30, adjusted net income per share was $0.80 versus $0.64 in the same period last year. We are affirming our guidance for 2025 full year of revenue between $2.76 billion and $2.82 billion, adjusted net income between $1.02 and $1.07 per share and adjusted EBITDA between $376 million and $382 million. Based on my earlier comments around fourth quarter revenue, we expect full year revenue to come in toward the bottom of the guidance range. On the guidance assumption slide that has been posted to the Investor Relations section of our website, you will notice that the interest expense range has increased as a result of a change in the allocation of these expenses between continuing and discontinued operations. We believe the increase in interest expense will be offset by lower stock compensation expense. And as a result, the EPS guidance range is unchanged. Turning to the balance sheet and cash flow. At September 30, net debt was $2.1 billion. Since year-end 2024, the increase in debt is related to the expenses to exit the previously planned Rotech acquisition, which were paid in June of approximately $100 million and more recently, cost to remedy a challenging start-up of a new kitting facility for the Products & Healthcare Services segment, which has led to a temporary inventory imbalance. Work needed for that P&HS kitting facility is ongoing. And as a result, the net debt level at the end of this year is expected to be only slightly lower than at September 30. While detrimentally impacting third quarter cash flow, as shown in the consolidated cash flow statement, the overbought inventory from the start-up will benefit customer demand across the P&HS business lines in the coming months and reduces the cash needed to be spent over that same time period. It's important to recognize that more than 100% of the cash used from operating activity in the 3 and 9 months ended periods was due to the discontinued operations and that continuing operations, inclusive of stranded costs, generated cash from operating activity. In fact, in measuring levered free cash flow as adjusted EBITDA from continuing operations, less CapEx from continuing operations and less all interest costs across both continuing and discontinued operations, there was $28 million of free cash flow in the third quarter and $78 million through the first 9 months of the year. Before taking questions, I'd like to say we're very bullish on the outlook for the Home-Based Care business and recognize that it's a very exciting time in the history of Owens & Minor. We look forward to getting on the road, sharing our enthusiasm and having the market better appreciate the attractiveness of the home-based care space. With that, I'll now turn the call back to the operator for Q&A. Operator?