In addition to her membership in the Institute of Medicine, she is a member of the National Academy of Public Administration and the National Academy of Social Insurance and is past-President and board member of AcademyHealth and a Policy Council Member of the Academy of Public Policy and Management.
Publications
Books
Medicaid Financing Crisis: Balancing Responsibilities, Priorities, and Dollars, ed. (with Diane Rowland and Alina Salganicoff). Washington, D.C.: AAAS Press, 1993.
Insuring the Nation's Health: Market Competition, Catastrophic and Comprehensive Approaches, (with Jack Hadley and John Holahan). Washington, D.C.: The Urban Institute, 1981.
National Health Insurance: Conflicting Goals and Policy Choices, ed. (with John Holahan and Theodore Marmor). Washington, D.C.: The Urban Institute, March 1980.
Financing Health Care for the Elderly: Medicare, Medicaid, and Private Health Insurance, (with John Holahan). Washington, D.C.: The Urban Institute, 1979.
Medicare: The Politics of Federal Hospital Insurance, Lexington, MA: Heath, Washington, D.C. 1977.
Other publications
Feder is the author of 36 articles in peer-reviewed journals in medicine and public affairs, including several articles in JAMA and the New England Journal of Medicine, over 10 chapters in academic and books, as well as less academic political publications.
Incumbent Frank Wolf (R) was expected to have an easy reelection in Northern Virginia's 10th congressional district but Feder posed a surprisingly strong challenge. An October 10 poll by R.T. Strategies showed Judy Feder to be within 5% at 42% to Wolf's 47%.[1] Late in the campaign, the DCCC added Va-10 to their target list due to Feder's strong campaign and prodigious fund-raising, bringing in a total of $1.6 million. The DCCC also sent her a late contribution of $75,000.00.
Ultimately, Feder lost to Wolf, 57.25%-40.89%, but gave him the closest challenge he had faced in 24 years (with the obvious exceptions of the 1982 and 1986 campaigns). The 10th district is notorious as a difficult district for challengers due to its reliance upon the expensive Washington, D.C. media market. This is evidenced by the fact that Wolf required multiple campaigns to win the seat.[2]
In February 2008, CQ Politics rated Feder ninth nationally in terms of "U.S. House Candidates challenging incumbents of the opposite party who had the most cash-on-hand as of Dec. 31." She won the June 10 Democratic primary by a closer than expected margin over a conservative opponent. She faced Republican incumbent Frank Wolf in the November 4 general election in a rematch of their 2006 contest.[3][4]
Judy Feder lost the bid for election to Frank Wolf during the November 4 general elections 36% to 60%.[5] With 190 of 194 precincts reporting she had 123,627 votes to Frank Wolf's 198,286 votes and Neraj Nigam's 7,353 votes. In a year when Democrats won the Presidential vote and the open Virginia Senate race, Judy Feder actually received a lower percentage of the vote than she had received in 2006.