Quigley, FranPenman, Jennifer2020-10-202020-10-20201754 Willamette Law Review 171https://hdl.handle.net/1805/24134The Bayh-Dole Act of 1980 allowed pnvate patenting of inventions discovered with federally-funded research. Congress balanced that significant benefit to private entities by empowenng the government to 'arch in"and grant a license to another manufacturer when the license holder has not made the invention available to the public on reasonable terms. Bayh-Dole also allows march-in when necessary to alleviate health or safety needs. Remarkably, federal agencies have not once exercised these rights since Bayh-Dole's passage, even in the face of significant problems with access to medicines discovered with federal funding This Article argues that the current medicines pricing and access crisis, highlighted by the inaccessibility of an effective prostate cancer drug discovered by government funding, calls for the US agencies to finally fulfill the terms of the Acten-USBetter Late than Never: How the U.S. Government Can and Should Use Bayh-Dole March-In Rights to Respond to the Medicines Access CrisisArticle