There are related questions, such as: What is the correct dose and frequency of aerobic exercise for unconditioned middle age people?
However, my question asks in particular about limited time budgets, and what is ideal when you need to make the best use of such a limited time budget, not what is recommended in general health guidelines.
I'm aware that the exercise regime should ideally be balanced. However, this seems to assume that the patient has ample time (and willpower) to exercise basically every day, or many times a week, more than two.
Consider a otherwise healthy 40 year old male patient with no known health conditions, also with normal BMI. The time budget for exercise consists of only two sessions a week, each consisting of 30 minutes effective exercise time. Jogging/running is the type of exercise we will consider.
By "general health" I mean VO2 max which is strongly correlated with lifespan, and also cardio — reducing risk of cardiovascular events. If there are any other primary health benefits that I forgot to include that fit into "general health", please specify them. Weight loss is of no interest here.
What type of exercise should this patient get? HIIT? High aerobic training? A combination of the two? Should the odd week see some zone 2 exercise?
Please provide links to peer reviewed medical literature, such as that found on PubMed.
As a bonus question: If indeed there should be no low aerobic training with such a small time budget, when does this change? What does the time budget need to look like before it starts making sense to include low aerobic training as well?