Absolutely not!
Although directly related, they are different components and perform very different functions!
Our ‘Target Swing Lever’ 1) Controls The Clubhead, 2) establishes and maintains ‘Bottom Of Swing Arc’ (BOSA) and 3) provides the #4 Pressure Point. (Pectoralis Upper Chest applying Pivot Pressure against the Biceps … Upper Target Lever – Load Coil Brace and Unload Uncoil Target)(see ALSDR … ‘The Power Line Delivery Sequence’)
The Hands – Grip, Control the Handle and thus the golf club generally.
The Clubhead (Clubface Aim) Directly Controls the Golf Ball. (see ‘Initial Ball Flight’)
You primarily turn the ‘Handle’ in ‘Neutral Hands’ to adjust the ‘Clubface Aim’. Avoid twisting or torquing your ‘Grip’ into ‘Stronger or Weaker’ positions.
Your ‘Hands, Wrists and Forearms’ (Lower Lever Assemblies) have three ‘Specialty Positions’ … Turned, Vertical and Rolled. (TVR) Turned ‘Opens’ The Clubface. (see ‘Weak – Low Energy Side of the Target Line’) Rolled ‘Closes’ The Clubface Aim. (see ‘Strong – High Energy Side of the Target Line’) Neutral ‘TVR’ (‘Wrist Hinge’) is more controllable than being torqued Target or Brace Side. (see ‘TVR Twist Loaded’)
Put yet another way? If you want a ‘Stronger Clubface Aim’, it is better to ‘Adjust the Golf Club Handle’ in a ‘Neutral Grip or Wrists Hinge’ than it is to actually adjust the entire ‘Primary Articulating Joint, Radius & Ulna’. (see ‘PAJ’)
There is tremendous benefit in ‘Having One Primary Grip’ (Except Perhaps For The Putter) If you adjust your TVR, you are asking for problems, including ‘Soft Tissue Injury’ (STI). The more torque load you apply to your ‘Wrist Hinges’, the more ‘Flip-Handed’ tendency you have.