I think that it is safe to say that proper body alignment is important in all sports, and the spine plays a crucial role in golf. There is a lot of infor out there on this topic. Here is a link:
ask your chiropractor to take before and after xrays and see if you can find a difference--there aint none--makes you wonder
What are you trying to say here? I had Scholiosis as a teenager, and also went to a chiropracter *sp. The changes were amazing. Also I had a lower back injury playing football in highschool. As the years went on it got worse. It got to the point where my 30 min drive to work had me in tears just getting out of the car. I went to spine specialists and physical therapists, but nothing worked. When they recommended surgery, I went to a chiropracter *sp, and what do you know, 2.5 months later, no back pain at all. I now go 1 time a quarter for adjustment, mixed with a regimen of stretching and what do you no, no back pain.
Another example. My little girl has had severe earaches about once a month since she started daycare. The docs wanted her to get tubes. Started taking her to, you guessed it, the chiro, and what do you know. NO MORE EARACHES. To me proof is in the pudding.
One last example. Was hitting the ball around 250 to 275yds (on my best drives) and scoring very well except on courses over 6500 yds. Took a lesson from a TGM guy (odd terminology, and told me that 90% of what I had heard about golf was wrong). Every pro I talked to told me he was selling "snake oil" (sound familiar). After 1 month, guess what. I hit the green of a 567yd par 5 (driver, 3/4 3 wood) in 2 with no wind. Proof is in the pudding. Doesn't matter how as long as it does.