

Immanuel's medical claims are sometimes combined with her spiritual beliefs: she believes many gynecological illnesses are the result of having sex dreams with succubi and incubi, and receiving demon sperm and that endometriosis, infertility, miscarriage, and sexually transmitted infections are caused by spirit spouses. In April 2020, local deputies were unable to serve notice of the Louisiana suit because Immanuel had moved to Houston, where she set up a new practice in a strip mall. It was removed later, by a different physician, after a flesh-eating infection had developed. Immanuel prescribed medication but did not take X-rays or attempt to retrieve the needle. According to the lawsuit, the woman told Immanuel that the broken needle had lodged in her arm while injecting methamphetamine. Ī January 2020 medical malpractice lawsuit filed against Immanuel alleged that a 37-year-old woman died after Immanuel failed to remove a needle fragment from her arm. According to Concordia University theological studies professor André Gagné, Immanuel's beliefs originate in African Pentecostalism and the charismatic movement. president Donald Trump and a long-time critic of what she views as sexual immorality, including "unmarried couples living together, homosexuality, bestiality, polygamy" and what she calls "homosexual terrorism". She has been an outspoken supporter of U.S. She is a self-described "wealth transfer coach" and has written several books as part of her Occupying Force series.

Immanuel is a pastor, founder of Fire Power Ministries, and host of a radio-and-television show entitled Fire Power.

The Texas Medical Board licensed Immanuel in November 2019 for pediatrics and emergency medicine with an address associated with Houston's Rehoboth Medical Center, which she also owns.
#Dr stella immanuel license
She is a registered physician in Texas and has an active medical license from the Texas Medical Board. In 2006, she owned the Rapha Medical and Therapeutic Clinic in Louisiana. In February 1999, she joined the General Pediatric Care Clinic as a pediatrician. In December 1998, she began practicing at the Southern Pediatric Clinic in Alexandria, Louisiana. Immanuel began her career at a pediatric clinic in Louisiana. Immanuel completed a pediatric residency at the Bronx-Lebanon Hospital Center in New York City. In 1990, she graduated from medical school at the University of Calabar in Nigeria, and in 1992, she moved to the United States. Immanuel attended Cameroon Protestant College, a secondary school in Bali, Cameroon. She recalled an interest in becoming a doctor from the age of four. Stella Gwandiku-Ambe Immanuel was born in 1965 in Cameroon. As of 2021, she practices at a private clinic in a strip mall in Texas. Immanuel emigrated to the United States after completing her medical education in Nigeria. She has said endometriosis, infertility, miscarriage, and sexually transmitted infections (STIs) are caused by spirit spouses, and has also endorsed a number of conspiracy theories that include the involvement of space aliens and the Illuminati in manipulating society and government. Immanuel is also the founder of a charismatic religious organization called Fire Power Ministries in her role as its founder, she has made fringe claims about other medical conditions, especially in relation to human sexuality. The platforms removed Immanuel's videos and posts, which they said promote misinformation related to the pandemic. In mid-2020 amid the COVID-19 pandemic, a video went viral on social media platforms in which Immanuel said hydroxychloroquine can cure COVID-19, and that public health measures such as social distancing and the wearing of face masks are ineffective and unnecessary.

Stella Gwandiku-Ambe Immanuel (born 1965) is a Cameroonian-American physician and pastor.
