of the nine studies included in the review , there were four articles from Iran, two from Palestine and one article each Oman, Qater, and Egypt. Eight of the articles were original research articles published in journals and the study from Iran was a dissertation. All nine articles employed questionnaires/surveys among pregnant women on use of herbal medicine during pregnancy, type herbal products, condition of use, source of information, referral source. Six 1113 studies discussed the perception and evaluation of herbal medicine pregnancy. The findings of the were extracted and the results compiled under three themes: user profile, prevalence, pattern of use and referral, information sources, and perception and self reported evaluation. The sociodemographic profile of the pregnant women from nine studies included for this review is shown in Table 1. The prevalence of use of herbal medicines among pregnant women from the Middle East varied from 22.3% to 82.3%. The most commonly used herbs