English/Nat The United Nations raised concern on Thursday about the health care situation in Kosovo, saying Serb doctors who staffed most of the province's hospitals were fleeing in droves. The U-N said Kosovo's main hospital, Pristina University Hospital, was run directly from the Health Ministry in Belgrade and staffed and administered almost exclusively by Serbs. But almost every Serb member of staff has left in recent days as Yugoslav forces withdrew and the province's ethnic Albanians began to return from refugee camps in Albania and Macedonia. Albanian doctors and nurses are returning to work at Pristina hospital on Friday for the first time after a mass exodus of doctors when NATO air strikes first started British NATO K-F-O-R forces have secured the hospital so that the doctors and nurses can resume their work. Serb doctors are still working at the hospital but ethnic Albanian doctors are returning to assist Kosovar refugees and other patients who have not received medical attention for the last three months. Albanian pediatrician Dr. Bardhyll Abrashi says that he is coming back today after three months of not working. SOUNDBITE: (English) "There are many doctors here and we are here, particularly these days, as it is important that there are surgeons here for our soldiers and our children who have been wounded, or who have lost limbs. SUPER CAPTION: Dr. Bardhyll Abrashi, pediatrician, Pristina hospital For the last three months no Albanian patients were received at the Pristina hospital when run by the Serbs. The U-N High Commissioner for Refugees reported concern about the hospital situation in the southern town of Prizren, where Serb doctors were also fleeing. You can license this story through AP Archive: www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/8881ae28fc051b89ff7e860af46ad74f Find out more about AP Archive: www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork