Merrill, I'm an esophore, I read like crazy, and I was a -7.00 before I ever wore a CL. Then I wore GPs for a year at age 18. Then I wore SCL. I'm about a -7.50 now. Are you implying that I really would have been more myopic with SCLs than I already am with glasses?
FWIW, as near as I can tell, I gave up reading without glasses around -2.50 or so, fairly early on in the process.
Anyway, if you have a study saying progression is faster in SCLs than glasses, let me have it.
There are no studies. This new one was supposed to be a definitive study. I defended my statement the only way I could -- clinically:
"One only needs to be in practice 10 years to know that SCL wearers progress willy-nilly." RGP's require time and clinical acumen to fit well. SCL's can be fit by "any donkey," as an optician who graduated from (OD) Bill Vincett's optician's course said 25 years ago, so there's little interest in doing the harder thing, expecially when there's transitional discomfort to be dealt with. Study of RGPs' ability to retard progression have been mixed, as you're prolly aware. Those too, have design faults.
Problem is researchers rarely, if ever, ask clinicians who are RGP successful fitters to either participate or to help design the parameters of the studies they design.
As to your own myopia, here's a flow chart:
STRESS + (Genetics + nutrition + personality style + environmental factors + peripheral defocus) --> Refractive error.
There's a lecture hidden in in each stage, SO:
Here's a page that carries a link to my section on The Control of Nearsightedness.
Klaus Schmidt, in his opus magnus on myopia [(
www.myopia-manual.de) -- >1200 references, searchable in .pdf format] has a section on RGP's and if you're truly interested, is a treasure trove of references. (Besides, he cites me about a dozen times, so he can't be all bad, in spite of his "Germanic" English.

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Help?
(BTW: there are studies that show that NOT wearing a correction causes greater progression, as I recall, so that was not the thing to do, it appears.)